Press Release

For Immediate Release

 

AACN AWARDED GRANT TO PLAN NURSING CURRICULA TO
ENHANCE END-OF-LIFE CARE

WASHINGTON, D.C., May 16, 1997 -- The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation has awarded a grant of $35,712 to the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) to support strategy meetings toward development of curricula and other tools to heighten nurses' abilities to deliver essential end-of-life care.

The grant provides funding for a two-day roundtable of invited experts from academic and clinical settings who will identify crucial issues and content areas that are key to preparing nurse clinicians who can appropriately address end-of-life care and aid decisionmaking for dying patients and their families. A date for the roundtable meeting, to be held in Washington, D.C., will be announced.

Based in Princeton, N.J., the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation is the nation's largest philanthropy devoted exclusively to health and health care.

"We are pleased to have this opportunity to take a first step in developing pertinent curricula around issues so fundamentally central, perhaps the most meaningful, in an individual's health care," says AACN President Carole A. Anderson, PhD, RN, FAAN. "Nurses spend more time with patients and their families than do any other health professionals and are in the most immediate position to provide care, comfort, and counsel at the end of life when critical decisions must be reached and compassionate and often highly specialized care provided."

"The range of nursing experts to be invited to this important gathering --representing such areas as pain management, palliative care, and care involving major sources of morbidity, such as AIDS, cancer, and kidney disease -- illustrates the complexity of care and concerns that nurses must address in responding comprehensively and effectively to end-of-life needs of patients and family members," Dr. Anderson explains.

The roundtable will be the first stage in a two-stage process. A statement of recommended competencies for end-of-life care by the professional nurse, as well as specific guidelines for undergraduate and graduate curricula, will be drafted from presentations at the roundtable meeting. The curriculum model will be the basis for the second stage of the process -- development of Internet and other on-line tools to make educational materials available to the widest possible number of nursing students and practicing nurses.

Roundtable participants will be asked to consider an array of ethical, legal, and other concerns surrounding care near the end of life, among them:

  • communication between health care professionals and patients, including advance directives and "do not resuscitate" orders;

  • the appropriateness of high-technology interventions;

  • the roles and responsibilities of interdisciplinary team members; and

  • management of pain and prolonged suffering in intensive-care patients or in patients who are in coma.

Experts at the AACN roundtable also will address the understanding of death in different cultures, underlying philosophies of hospice care, and religious rituals that ease transition from life to death.

In addition, participants will develop a plan to influence the national licensing exam for registered nurses to test for end-of-life competencies and will recommend strategies for interdisciplinary education in end-of-life care.

The American Association of Colleges of Nursing is the national voice for university and four-year-college education programs in nursing. Representing more than 580 member schools of nursing at public and private institutions nationwide, AACN's educational, research, governmental advocacy, data collection, publications, and other programs work to establish quality standards for bachelor's- and graduate-degree nursing education, assist deans and directors to implement those standards, influence the nursing profession to improve health care, and promote public support of baccalaureate and graduate nursing education, research, and practice.

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CONTACT: Robert Rosseter
(202) 463-6930, x231
rrosseter@aacn.nche.edu

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