Time

1414 - 1430

Decisions at the End of Life – Advanced Care Planning

This session presents a series of cases all with clinical caveats but also which exemplify the complex relationship between timing and ethics. Clinical emergencies often require split second decisions to be made with incomplete data. So too, there are moments during the longitudinal trajectory of a patient’s care when important ethical decisions must be made. The relationship between a moment in time, the duration of that moment and the point that moment occurs in the trajectory of care is complex.

Karen Price

Karen Price was awarded the 2016 RACGP FMCER grant to undertake her part time PhD with the Monash Department of General Practice. She is exploring the construct of peer-connection in general practice. This explores GP’s wellbeing, and goal-directed informal learning. Karen’s research builds on her lifetime expertise as a GP. She is the co-developer and facilitator of GPs Down Under, an 8000+ member community of Australian and New Zealand GPs. She has chaired committees and developed mentor programs for both the AMA and the RACGP. Karen began her general practice in a large procedural practice which included providing medical assistance to the local district police surgeon. She has also been a successful practice owner growing a languishing practice into a thriving community practice in under a decade whilst wrangling three young school-aged children (who are now fully grown). Karen continues to develop evidence-based medicine, leadership, advocacy, and peer support, in both research and her ongoing clinical general practice. Most recently her advocacy, research and lifetime experience have coalesced into running for RACGP President after her service as deputy chair of the Victorian Faculty of the RACGP and past chair of the Women in General Practice committee of the RACGP. Karen was elected RACGP President in the 2020 national election. She commenced her two-year term on 30 November 2020.

@brookmanknight