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P-221  Working with hospices to ensure patients’ digital legacy wishes are adhered to
  1. James Norris1,2 and
  2. Mark Taubert3,4
  1. 1Digital Legacy Association, London, UK
  2. 2DeadSocial
  3. 3NHS UK
  4. 4Velindre Centre, Cardiff

Abstract

The Digital Legacy Association (DLA) was launched at last year’s Hospice UK conference. Their work is focused on raising awareness and improving processes in areas relating to death and the internet.

Over the last 12 months the DLA have published a free framework, developed training workshops, launched a free hospice inpatient resource, run ‘pop-up’ events, organised a Digital Legacy conference, carried out different forms of research and campaigned highlighting that end of life and bereavement in relation to the internet and electronic devices is an area requiring thought, governance and change.

The DLA spend a lot of time working with hospices, CCGs, charities and trusts. The outcome is improved knowledge and skillsets applied at an organisational and/or at an individual level. The diffusion of the DLAs information occurs by supporting professionals through a variety of different channels. In turn this helps professionals to better support patients and their families.

The DLA’s work often revolves around conversations and campaigning. Their recent work for Velindre NHS Trust, Aneurin Bevan UHB & Byw Nawr included building a TalkCPR awareness website. The goal of the TalkCPR campaign is to help increase dialogue around CPR and DNACPR within Wales. The TalkCPR campaign was recently nominated for a NHS Wales award.

This paper will document the DLA’s journey over the last year, explain how they use creativity to address end-of-life and document how they plan to support every UK hospice over the course of 2017.

This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work noncommercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

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