TY - JOUR T1 - 14 Managing uncertainty in care for people with dementia at the end of life: the use of heuristics JF - BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care JO - BMJ Support Palliat Care SP - A352 LP - A352 DO - 10.1136/bmjspcare-2017-001407.14 VL - 7 IS - 3 AU - Nathan Davies AU - Kethakie Lamahewa AU - Rammya Mathew AU - Jane Wilcock AU - Jill Manthorpe AU - Elizabeth L Sampson AU - Steve Iliffe Y1 - 2017/09/01 UR - http://spcare.bmj.com/content/7/3/A352.1.abstract N2 - Introduction The end of life for someone with dementia can present several challenges for practitioners. Challenges may be eased with the use of heuristics (rules-of-thumb). For example, FAST is used in stroke: Facial-weakness, Arm-weakness, Slurred-speech, Time to call 999. Our study developed a toolkit of heuristics to aid practitioners making difficult decisions when caring for someone with dementia at the end of life.Methods A co-design approach with three phases:1. Focus groups and semi-structured interviews with family carers and practitioners, to identify key decisions and how these should be made.Results were presented to a co-design group consisting of health and care practitioners, and family carers tasked with developing a toolkit of heuristics, through workshops.2. Testing the heuristics in practice for six-months in five clinical and care settings.3. Evaluation of heuristics through interviews and questionnaires at three and six-months.Results Four sets of heuristics were developed, covering; eating/swallowing difficulties, agitation/restlessness, reviewing treatment, and routine care. The heuristics are arranged as flowcharts. Eating/swallowing difficulties have two rules; ensuring eating/swallowing difficulties do not come as a surprise and reflection about ‘comfort-feeding’ only. Agitation/restlessness encourages a holistic approach, considering the environment, physical causes, and caregivers’ health/wellbeing. Reviewing treatment/interventions prompts practitioners to consider the benefits to quality-of-life and comfort. Finally, routine care, such as bathing, prompts practitioners to ensure care interventions improve or do not harm quality-of-life.Conclusions Practitioners liked the simplicity of the heuristics, making their implicit knowledge explicit, enhancing their confidence in making decisions at the end of life. ER -