Advanced care planning in dementia

Conceptualisation and recommendations for practice, policy and research

We, as the EAPC task force for ACP in dementia, aim to improve ACP in dementia, to achieve the following goals:

1. to promote societies that address future care needs of people with dementia based upon what they and their families and supporters consider important;
2. to provide people with dementia with equitable opportunity and a voice to identify and articulate what is important to them in their lives and in their relationships with those around them;
3. to protect people with dementia, wherever possible, from non-preferred or otherwise inappropriate care and treatment.
4. to support the notion that human existence has meaning and people, irrespective of diagnosis or cognitive abilities, are worthy of time to prepare for the future;
5. to foster inclusiveness in making ACP available for all, with tailored approaches as needed by specific groups.

The Task Force is chaired by Associate Professor Jenny T.van der Steen, Leiden University Medical Center, The Netherlands, and Associate Professor Ida J. Korfage, Erasmus MC, The Netherlands.

The core taskforce team at the EAPC World Congress in Rotterdam, June 2023.  From left to right: Lieve Van den Block, Jenny van der Steen, Ida Korfage, Miharu Nakanishi. 

  • Consensus definition of ACP in dementia: A 33-country Delphi study has recently been published. 

Click here to access the paper

  • Future policy and research for advance care planning in dementia: consensus recommendations from an international Delphi panel

Click here to access the paper

Background information

Palliative care in dementia including advance care planning is different from palliative care in diseases in which patients usually retain capacity for decision making until a late stage. For example, with dementia, managing and anticipating an uncertain course of the disease, and preparing family caregivers for a central role in decision making are essential. EAPC has issued a white paper on palliative care in dementia (van der Steen et al., 2014) which includes a domain on advance care planning, and a white paper on advance care planning which was limited to patients with decisional capacity (Rietjens et al., 2017). The leaders of the two previous relevant EAPC white papers join forces to build upon and expand their previous work to develop guidance on advance care planning in dementia.

Aims and objectives

To conceptualise advance care planning in dementia in terms of its definition, elements, and any differences with advance care planning in patients with other diseases who are expected to retain capacity. Further, based on evidence and consensus, to provide recommendations for optimal advance care planning in practice, for policy initiatives to promote advance care planning in dementia, and for areas that need research, and design issues.

 

Members

Assoc. Prof. Jenny T. van der Steen

Netherlands

MSc, PhD, FGSA

Leiden University Medical Center & Radboud university medical center, Nijmegen

Assoc. Prof. Ida J. Korfage

Netherlands

PhD

Erasmus MC University Medical Center Rotterdam
Karen Harrison Denning

Hon.Prof. Karen Harrison Dening

United Kingdom

RN, RMNH, RNLD, MA, PhD

Dementia UK, London & De Montfort University, Leicester

Prof. Phil Larkin

Switzerland
Université de Lausanne & University Hospital of Lausanne ( CHUV)

Prof. Deborah Parker

Australia

RN, PhD

University of Technology, Sydney

Assoc.Prof. Iva Holmerova

Czech Republic

MD, PhD

Charles University, Prague

Assoc. Prof. Miharu Nakanishi

Japan
Tohoku University, Sendai

Prof. Paola Di Giulio

Italy

RN, MSc

Turin University
Lieve van der Block

Prof. Lieve Van den Block

Belgium
VUB-UGhent End-of-Life Care Research Group, Belgium

Prof. Ninoslav Mimica

Croatia

MD, MSc, PhD, IFAPA

University of Zagreb

Prof. Jürgen in der Schmitten

Germany

MD, MPH

University of Duisburg-Essen

Prof. Rebecca Sudore, MD

USA

MD

University of California, San Francisco
Sandra Martins Pereira

Assoc. Prof. Sandra Martins Pereira

Portugal

RN, MSc, PhD

Universidade Católica Portuguesa, Porto