Title: Linda L' Emanuel, MD, PhD
1EPEC - OncologySupported by the National Cancer
InstituteAmerican Society for Clinical Oncology
EPEC - O Education on Palliative and End-of-life
Care -Oncology
- Linda L. Emanuel, MD, PhD
- Principal
- Jamie H. Von Roenn, MD
- Charles F. von Gunten, MD, PhD
- Co-Principals
- Frank D. Ferris, MD
- Editor
2Outline
- Policy background
- Charles von Gunten, MD, PhD
- The EPEC Project
- Frank Ferris, MD
- Introduce the EPEC-O Project
- Charles F von Gunten
3EPEC - OncologySupported by the National Cancer
InstituteAmerican Society for Clinical Oncology
Policy Background
- Charles F von Gunten, MD PhD
- Director, Palliative Care
- Associate Professor of Medicine
- University of California, San Diego
4Institute of Medicine, 1997
Approaching Death Improving Care at the End
of Life www.nas.edu/iom
5ASCO, 1998
- Oncologists responsibility to care for a patient
in a continuum from diagnosis throughout the
course of the illness. - In addition to appropriate anticancer treatment,
this includes symptom control and psychosocial
support during all phases of care, including
those during the last phase of life.
J Clin Oncol 1998161986-96
6National Cancer Policy Board Report , 1999
- RECOMMENDATION 5 Ensure quality of care at the
end of life, in particular, the management of
cancer-related pain and timely referral to
palliative and hospice care.
7National Cancer Policy Board Report , 2001
- Part I Summary and Ten Recommendations
- Part II Eight Commissioned Chapters
www.iom.edu
8NCI-designated cancer centers should play a
central role as agents of national policy in
advancing palliative care research and clinical
practice, with initiatives that address many of
the barriers identified in this report.
9Recommendation 6
- Best available practice guidelines should
dictate the standard of care for both physical
and psychosocial symptoms.
10Recommendation 6
Professional societies, particularly the American
Society of Clinical Oncology, should provide
leadership and training for nonspecialists, who
provide most of the care for cancer patients.
11Summary from Policy Background
- NCI and ASCO leadership needed
- Make best evidence practically available
- Role of oncologists as teachers
12The EPEC ProjectEducation for Physicians on
End-of-life Care
- Frank D. Ferris
- Co-Principal, The EPEC Project
- Professor of Medicine
- University of California, San Diego
13Background
- SUPPORT Study, 1995
- Lack of physician competency in end-of-life care
- Target 440,000 practicing physicians in the US
14(No Transcript)
15Method
- Core Curriculum
- Train-the-trainer dissemination
- Exposure for every practicing physician
16EPEC Materials
17Session Format
18Session Format
19EPEC Materials
- Trigger Tapes
- Trainers Guide
- Participants Handbook
- Slide Sets
- PowerPoint
- Reproduce with attribution
20Estimated Reach of EPEC Training of first 555
trainers in 2 years
- 6,800 training sessions
- 120,900 health professionals
- 83,138 physicians, residents, medical students
21www.EPEC.net
22Summary from EPEC Project
- Model for dissemination of new information
- Best education science as well as best medical
science - Doctors as teachers
23EPEC - OncologySupported by the National Cancer
InstituteAmerican Society for Clinical Oncology
EPEC-O Project Charles F von Gunten, MD,
PHD Associate Professor of Medicine Moores
Comprehensive Cancer Center, UCSD Medical
Director Center for Palliative Studies San Diego
Hospice Palliative Care
24Background to EPEC-O
- ASCO with commitment to palliative care
throughout the course of the disease - NCI to eliminate suffering and death by 2015
- Oncologists frequently called upon to teach
palliative care
25Background to EPEC-O
- Adapt EPEC
- Best scientific evidence
- Best education science
- Train-the-trainer
- Easy to use and flexible materials
- Incorporate Oncology-specific issues
26Imagine
27EPEC - OncologySupported by the National Cancer
InstituteAmerican Society for Clinical Oncology
Gaps in Cancer Care
28Principle message
- Gaps between current and desired practice need to
be filled so that palliative care becomes an
essential and inextricable part of comprehensive
cancer care
29Outline
- Describe the current state of palliative care in
cancer - Patients / families
- Oncologists
- Describe what is needed
- Introduce the EPEC-O curriculum
30Trigger Video
31Palliative Care
- Treatment to relieve pain and suffering.
- May be combined with therapies aimed at remitting
or curing cancer, or it may be the total focus of
care.
32Conventional Cancer Care
Medicare Hospice Benefit
Anti-neoplastic Therapy
Presentation
Death
6m
BereavementCare
33Comprehensive Cancer Care
Hospice Care
Anti-neoplastic Therapy
Palliative Care
Presentation
Death
6m
Symptom Rx Relieve Suffering
BereavementCare
34Gaps
- Large gap between reality, desire
- Fears
- Pain Suffering
- Be a burden
- Loss of control
- Desires
- Be comfortable
- Family able to cope
- Sense of control
351998 ASCO Survey
- 6,645 oncologists surveyed
- 118 questions
- n 3227 (48 response rate)
- No significant differences in answers based on
oncology specialty
36Source of Information about palliative care
- 90 Trial and Error
- 73 Colleagues and role models
- 38 Traumatic Experience
- Message No one is teaching this to oncologists
37Inadequate education about palliative care
- 81 inadequate mentor or coaching in how to
discuss poor prognosis - 65 inadequate information about controlling
symptoms
38Personal Failure
- 76 feel some sense of personal failure if
patient dies of cancer - 90 feel at least some anxiety discussing poor
prognosis - 75 feel at least some anxiety discussing symptom
control with patients and families
39Unrealistic Expectations
- 29 Patient
- 50 Family
- 27 Conflict
40At least some Influence
- 97 Oncologists reluctant to give up
- 99 Patient / family demands for antineoplastic
therapy - 80 Chemotherapy is reimbursable
- 80 Reluctance to talk about issues other than
antineoplastic therapy - 91 Takes more time to do palliative care than
give antineoplastic therapy
41Professional Satisfaction
- 98 some emotional satisfaction to provide
palliative care - 92 some intellectual satisfaction to provide
palliative care - Marked contrast with preparation and a cause for
optimism
42Outline
- Describe the current state of palliative care in
cancer - Patients / families
- Oncologists
- Describe what is needed
- Introduce the EPEC-O curriculum
43Goals of EPEC-O
- Practicing oncologists
- Core clinical skills
- Improve
- competence, confidence
- patient - physician relationships
- Patient / family satisfaction
- physician satisfaction
- Not intended to make every oncologist a
palliative care expert
44EPEC-O Curriculum . . .
- conflict resolution
- clinical trials phase I
- preventing professional burnout
- goals of care, treatment priorities
45EPEC-O Curriculum . . .
- symptom management
- diagnosis and prognosis
- advance care planning
- cancer survivorship
- whole patient assessment
46EPEC-O Curriculum . . .
- physician-assisted suicide / euthanasia
- withholding and withdrawing Rx
- Hydration and Nutrition
- care in the last hours of life
- grief and bereavement support
- spiritual and cultural competence
47EPEC-O Curriculum . . .
- how to teach
- models of palliative care
- Next steps to improve palliative care care in
cancer - interdisciplinary teamwork (throughout)
48. . EPEC-O Curriculum
- apply each skill in your practice
- enhance professional satisfaction
- foster creative approaches to create change in
cancer care - change will not be effective without oncologists
49EPEC for OncologistsSupported by the National
Cancer InstituteAmerican Society for Clinical
Oncology
-
- Summary
- Gaps need to be filled so that palliative care
becomes an essential and inextricable part of
comprehensive cancer care
Plenary 1