Advance Care Planning (ACP) is essential to delivering patient-centred care. It ensures that healthcare decisions reflect the personal values, goals, and preferences of people with serious illnesses, especially if they become unable to speak for themselves.
While these conversations can be emotionally and ethically complex, starting them early significantly improves the quality of end-of-life care, reduces stress, and fosters trust between healthcare providers, patients, and families. However, many healthcare providers struggle to initiate these discussions due to discomfort, time constraints, and fear of causing distress. With proper training, healthcare providers can build the skills and confidence needed to approach ACP with clarity, compassion, and respect.
What is Advance Care Planning?
Advance Care Planning is the process of discussing and documenting a person’s wishes for future healthcare. According to the Canadian Hospice Palliative Care Association (CHPCA), ACP is:
“A way for individuals to think about, talk about and share their thoughts and wishes about the kind of health and personal care they would want in the future if they were unable to speak for themselves.”
Key elements of ACP include:
- Identifying a Substitute Decision-Maker (SDM) – someone who can advocate for the patient’s wishes if they are unable to do so.
- Discussing values and treatment preferences with healthcare providers and family to define priorities.
- Documenting these wishes in an Advance Care Directive or similar legal document to ensure clarity.
Why ACP matters:
- Aligns care with what the person truly values.
- Reduces emotional burden, stress and uncertainty for families and providers.
- Prevents unwanted or non-beneficial medical interventions and ensures dignity in care.
The Challenges of Starting ACP Conversations
Starting ACP discussions can be difficult for several reasons:
- Reluctance from people with serious illnesses and their families to talk about death or decline.
- Uncertainty about diagnosis, prognosis, or treatment options.
- Complex family dynamics, where perspectives on care may differ.
- Fear of miscommunication, which could result in confusion or conflict.
Healthcare providers may avoid initiating these conversations unless they are trained and supported to do so.
Why Training in ACP Conversations Matters
Training equips healthcare providers with the skills needed to discuss ACP confidently and compassionately. Structured training helps healthcare professionals:
- Approach conversations with empathy and clarity.
- Support people with serious illnesses in making informed, values-based decisions.
- Facilitate shared decision-making that respects individual goals.
- Reduce stress and conflict among families and care teams.
Key Training Components for Effective ACP Conversations
1. Active Listening & Empathy
Providers learn to use open-ended questions, read non-verbal cues, and reflective listening while recognizing emotions and responding with compassion.
2. Initiating ACP Discussions
ACP conversations are introduced naturally, highlighting how they honor personal wishes. Training emphasizes that ACP is an ongoing conversation that evolves over time and involves multiple discussions.
3. Engaging in Shared Decision-Making
Healthcare teams help people with serious illnesses and families explore their values and care preferences while clarifying the implications of their choices.
4. Handling Emotional Responses & Family Conversations
Compassionately addressing fears, grief, and family disagreements associated with future planning supports a positive, respectful and constructive dialogue focussed on person-centered care.
5. Building Confidence in Healthcare Teams
Role-playing and simulation exercises build skills and prepare providers for real-world scenarios, fostering interdisciplinary collaboration to ensure consistency and support.
How Life and Death Matters Training Resources Support ACP
Life and Death Matters provides practical, accessible training tools to support healthcare providers in ACP, including:
- Books, e-learning modules, and workshops – tailored for PSWs, nurses, and educators.
- Scenario-based learning – to explore real-life challenges.
- Strategies for compassionate communication – to help initiate, build confidence and navigate challenging discussions with people with serious illnesses and families.
- Care Planning Cookies – a simple and effective tool that uses thought-provoking prompts to help start meaningful conversations about values, preferences, and care goals.
- Support for interdisciplinary teams – encouraging unified care between nurses, personal support workers, physicians, social workers, and other care providers.
- Focus on empathy and respect – ensuring that care aligns with the individual’s goals and values.
The Impact of Early ACP Conversations
Early ACP conversations:
- Empower individuals to make decisions that reflect their priorities.
- Improve alignment of medical care with personal wishes.
- Reduce stress, conflict, and uncertainty for families in crisis situations.
- Build trust between people with serious illnesses, families, and healthcare teams.
Conclusion: Encouraging Proactive ACP
ACP should be an integral part of patient care – not just reserved for the final stages of life. These conversations are most effective when started early and revisited regularly.
Structured training prepares healthcare professionals to handle sensitive conversations, reduce uncertainty, and provide care that truly respects the person at the centre.