Title: Palliative Medicine for the Physician
1Palliative Medicine for the Physician
- Rebecca L. Strickland, M.D.
- Internal Medicine, PGY-3
2Palliative Medicine
- What is it?
- When do I use it ?
- What resources are out there to help me and my
patient?
3Objectives
- Define Palliative Medicine and Hospice
- Review Studies Which Support Its Use
- Learn Hospice Criteria For Admission
- Local Resources Explored- Assistance For Your
Patients and You
4Definitions
- Palliative Medicine The active total care of
patients, controlling pain and minimizing
emotional, social and spiritual problems at a
time when disease is not responsive to active
treatment-- World Health Organization
5Palliative Medicine Objectives
- To care, not cure.
- To control suffering
- Maximize the quality of life
- Maximize the quality of death
-
6Eric Cassell on Suffering
- Occurring when a threat to the integrity of a
person is perceived and continues until the
threat passes or until the integrity of the
person is reestablished. - It is understood mostly in terms of physical pain
but emotional and spiritual pain are also
recognized parts of suffering.
7History of Palliative Medicine
- 1967 in London, England by Dr. Cicely
Saunders,the first hospice house opens - She recognized the need for effective symptom
control, care of the patient and family as a
unit, an interdisciplinary team approach, the use
of volunteers, the continuum of care and family
follow-up after a patients death.
8History
- 1970s Palliative medicine movement continues
with the concept of death awareness - Elizabeth Kubler-Ross develops theories on death
and dying - 1974 First hospice house in U.S. opens in New
Haven, Connecticut
9National Hospice Study
- 2 years in duration
- 5,853 patients enrolled
- 25 hospices and 14 conventional care sites
(inpatient, outpatient and combination
oncological care sites) - Selected and financed by the Health Care
Financing Administration (HCFA)
10National Hospice Study
- Cancer patients admitted to the demonstration
hospices between October 1,1980 and September 30,
1982, and dying by December 1983 - Medicare Conventional Care (CC) cancer patients
(from the 14 conventional sites) who were served
during this period and died by June 1983 were the
comparison sample.
11National Hospice Study
- Evaluated costs in relation to time proximity to
time of death - Compared total cost of each patients care during
each 30 day time period (total inpatient,
ancillary costs from inpatient days, home care
costs etc.)
12Estimated Total Medicare Health Care Costs Per
Month Over Each of the Last 6 months of Life
(Adjusted for Patient Mix)
13Summary of Cost Savingsover the Last Year of Life
- HC vs. CC 2,221 saved/year
- HB vs. CC 585 saved/year
- The costs for hospice are higher and the savings
are lower if the patient is enrolled for a longer
period of time, but the savings are still evident
14Quality of Death Wallston KA et al.
- Secondary analysis of National Hospice Study data
- Comparison of home-care or hospital-based hospice
with conventional care
15Quality of Death
- Developed by weighting physician reports of what
the last 3 days of life were like as compared to
how the patient stated they would like them to
be. - 13 situational elements examined
- Analysis of variance and analysis of covariance
were done to rule out results obtained by chance
or artifact
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17Quality of Death
- The QOD for the two groups of hospice patients
remained significantly higher (PCC patients and there was no difference between
the two hospice groups
18The Lancet (April, 1984) A Randomized,
Controlled Trial of Hospice Care
- Terminally-ill cancer patients in a Veterans
Administration Hospital - Randomized to hospice (137) or conventional
care (110) - No significant differences in measures of pain,
symptoms, ADLs or affect
19The Lancet A Summary
- Hospice patients expressed more satisfaction with
the care that they received and caregivers
expressed more satisfaction and less anxiety than
those in the control group - Hospice was not associated with reduced use of
hospital inpatient days or therapeutic procedures
and was at least as expensive as conventional
care
20The Lancet Summary
- Since satisfaction with care was significantly
higher with hospice at essentially equal cost,
hospice should remain a viable option for
end-of-life care
21The Lancet Downfalls of the Study
- Hospice consults only given the care of the
patient remained with the conventional primary
physician with limited help and advice provided
for the patient and the caregiver by the hospice
staff while hospitalized.
22The LancetDownfalls of the Study
- An inpatient hospice home was utilized much more
than the traditional home hospice, increasing
costs. - Only 3 of the VA hospice cohort died at home as
compared to 77 of routine hospice patients and
17 of the general public
23The Lancet The Unofficial Summary
- The VA Hospice Care was not even close to ideal
hospice care yet patient satisfaction was much
higher. Costs were approximately equal despite
the very low numbers of patients who were allowed
to die at home where total costs are lowest. - Hospice is a viable medical option
24Hospice
-
- Misunderstood
- and
- Under-utilized
25Hospice Fast Facts
- As of 1999, the National Hospice Organization
(NHO) has knowledge of over 3,100 operational or
planned hospice programs located in the 50
states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and
Guam.
26The Interdisciplinary Team
- Physician
- Nurses/ Nurses Aides
- Chaplain(s)
- OT/PT
- Social Worker(s)
- Volunteers
- Case Managers
27Hospice Fast Facts
- NHO estimates that 540,000 patients were served
by hospice in 1998 - 1995 60 of hospice patients had cancer, 6
heart-related disease, 4 had AIDS, 2 had
Alzheimers, 27 had other diagnoses - 1 of every 2 cancer deaths in the US is cared for
by hospice
28Hospice Fast Facts
- In 1998, the average length of stay was 51.3 days
- The median length of stay was 25 days
- In 1995, 77 of hospice patients died in their
own personal residence, 19 died in an
institutional facility and 4 in other settings
29Hospice Fast Facts
- Medicare per diem rates of reimbursement
- ----94.17 per day of home care
- ---418.93 per day of general inpatient care
- More than 90 of hospice care hours are provided
in patients homes, thus substituting for more
expensive inpatient care
30Hospice Fast Facts
- 28 of ALL Medicare costs go towards care of
people in their last year of life almost 50 of
those costs are expended in the last 2 months of
life. - Because of the documented savings, most private
insurance companies also have a hospice benefit.
31Hospice Fast Facts
- 1995 study by Lewin-VHI commissioned by NHO
showed that for every dollar spent on hospice,
Medicare saved 1.52 in Part A and B
expenditures. - 3,192 saved in the last month of life as hospice
home care days are often substituted for
expensive hospitalizations.
32More Hospice Fast Facts
- Care of the patient by the PCP is encouraged in
order to maintain the continuity of care adds
to the sense of security and confidence in the
system - Physician time billable under Medicare Part B
only one physician per 30 days, 30 minutes of
care minimum required
33More Hospice Fast Facts
- Payment Code-- G0065
- Hospice is also a paid benefit of Medicaid in 43
states, including North and South Carolina
34More Hospice Fast Facts
- The PCP may attend the IDT meetings or receive
updates from the meetings - Care of the hospice patient may be turned over to
the hospice medical director at any time ensuring
appropriate care and symptom management
351996 Gallup PollCommissioned by NHO
- 9/10 adults would prefer to be cared for at home
if terminally ill with - When asked to name their greatest fear associated
with death, being a burden to family and
friends was most cited. Pain was the second
most common.
361996 Gallup Poll
- Nearly 90 of adults believe it is the familys
responsibility to care for the dying - 35 of the adults surveyed reported if terminally
ill they would ask their doctor to help end their
life.
371996 Gallup Poll
- Most adults (62) believe it would take a year or
more to adjust to the death of a loved one, yet
few (10) of the public have ever participated in
a bereavement program of grief counseling
following a death of a loved one
38Palliative Medicine Basic Choices
- Palliative Medicine Consultation
- Hospice Referral
- Local Resources
39Palliative Medicine Consultation
- Usually an oncologist or internist
- Will see patients and families and assist in
creating a plan of care acceptable to all
involved (Family meeting) - Patient evaluation for symptoms, pain and other
concerns of the patient
40Palliative Medicine Consultation
- Recommendations for pain and symptom control via
pharmacologic, invasive and non-invasive
treatments - Assistance with discharge placement
- Assistance with a good discharge checklist
41Hospice Referral
- Referrals can be made by anyone but the terminal
diagnosis and life expectancy must be certified
by a physician
42Hospice Referral
- Use prognosis guidelines to assist with a timely
referral to hospice, a life expectancy of 6
months or less is essential for eligibility
43Four levels of Hospice Care
- Routine Home Care
- Continuous Home Care
- Respite Home Care
- General inpatient Care
44Benefits of Hospice to Patients
- The patient becomes a team member, remains with a
sense of control - A sense of security with the ability to contact a
nurse by phone 24 hrs/day - Patients and families become better educated to
make end-of-life decisions - Relief of financial stress and burden
45Benefits of Hospice to Patients
- Spiritual support to help comfort patient
- Need not be admitted to a hospital for care, can
choose to die at home, comfortable and out of
pain - Patients are better served with adequate symptom
control, thereby maximizing the quality of life - Better quality of death
46Benefits of Hospice to Families
- Advance care directives are addressed by the
patient prior to absolute need, thereby taking
the burden off families who may otherwise have to
try to guess the patients wishes - Family members are taught how to care for the
patient at home
47Benefits of Hospice to Families
- Support offered to the family by the IDT helps to
prevent the overwhelming sensations of burden,
helplessness and burnout. - The family is comforted to know that the patient
care is not being compromised, even if the
patient is dying at home.
48Benefits of Hospice to Families
- Other community agencies can be employed to help
take care of the patient and assist the family - Support groups are available
- Family members are better equipped to deal with
death and bereavement
49General Guidelines for Determining Prognosis
- To assist with determination of non-cancer
end-stage diseases - 1. The patients condition is life limiting and
the patient and/or family has been informed of
this determination.
50General Guidelines for Determining Prognosis
- 2. The patient and/or family have elected
treatment goals directed toward symptom relief
rather than cure of the underlying disease.
51General Guidelines for Determining Prognosis
- 3. The patient has either documented clinical
progression of the disease as seen in the disease
specific criteria, multiple E.R. visits,
increased home nursing needs, a marked decline in
functional status --or-- Documented recent
impaired nutritional status related to the
terminal disease
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53General Guidelines for Determining Prognosis
- Functional status decline documentation
- Dependence in at least 3 of 6 ADLs bathing,
dressing,feeding, transfers, continence of stool
and bladder, and ability to ambulate
independently to the bathroom - --or-- A Karnofsky score of 50 or less
54Karnofsky Performance Status Scale
- 100--normal, no complaints
- 80--normal activity with effort
- 70--cares for self unable to carry on normal
activity or active work - 60--requires occas. assistance but able to care
for most of own needs - 50--requires considerable assistance and
frequent medical care. Disabled.
55Karnofsky Performance Status Scale
- 40--Unable to care for self, requires
institutional care, disease may be progressing
rapidly - 30--Severely disabled hospital admission
indicated - 20--Very sick active supportive tx
- 10--Moribund
- 0--Dead
56Barriers to Providing Palliative Care
- Lack of education of healthcare professionals-
understanding admission criteria for hospice,
misunderstandings of control issues,
uncomfortable talking with patients - Lack of education of the public
- Late referrals
57Barriers to Providing Palliative Care
- Caregiver stress
- Time factor for physicians
- Legal and regulatory constraints for obtaining
opioid medications - Adequate nursing staff to care for the dying
- Fiscal constraints on length of stay
58Approaches to Improving Palliative Care
- EDUCATION! of the public and physicians
- Physicians can then learn to uncover the various
layers of concerns that are important to those
who are dying. Once concerns are brought to
light, much can be done to address them
59Vachon et al. Meta-analysis
- Four studies examined
- Determined major symptoms associated with
terminal cancer - Pain, fatigue, appetite disturbances,
psychological distress and dyspnea were found to
occur in the majority of patients in at least one
study
60Vachon et al. Unmet Needs
- Common practical services and instrumental
activities of daily living - Housework(29), nursing care(17), financial
assistance during treatment (17), family housing
during treatment, shopping, cooking, cleaning etc.
61Community Resources Can Assist You with
Helping Your Patients Meet Their Needs --Do You
Know How to Use Them?
62Community Resources Can Help Meet These Unmet
Needs
- Social workers from the hospital, hospice or
clinics are excellent resources for locating
services needed. - Churches
- Yellow pages of the phone book
- Government pages of the phone book-local social
service agencies - Internet
63Forsyth County Resources for Palliative Care and
Unmet Needs
- Hospice of Winston-Salem and Forsyth County, Inc.
- Cancer Services, Inc.
- Human Service Alliance
- Senior Services, Inc.
- American Cancer Society
- First Line Directory of Community Services
64Forsyth County Resources
- Assistance with support groups, living
arrangements, counseling, Meals on Wheels,
transportation, respite care, medication and
treatment, wigs, makeup, in-home aide services,
housing placement, financial assistance, legal
services, adult daycare, visitation etc.
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70Palliative Medicine Objectives
- To care when cure is not possible
- To control suffering
- To maximize quality of life
- To maximize quality of death
71Palliative Medicine
- What is it?
- When do I use it ?
- What resources are out there to help me and my
patient?
72Many Thanks To
- Dr. Ramon Velez- for his insight and suggestions
- Dr. Dick Stevenson of Hospice- for his time and
input - Christine Brandon--the computer queen