Title: A Conversation With Tiffany
1A Conversation With Tiffany
2Edutainment
- Neologism new word coinage
- Similar to infotainment
- Expresses the marriage of education and
entertainment in a work or presentation - The science and art of consciously integrating
educational messages into popular media
entertainment formats.
3Tiffanys Intention
- Address difficult subject(s) with humor and
poignancy - Critical look at suffering
- Illustrates poverty of the spirit
- Multi-purpose/multi-venue/multi-conversation
application - Invitation to view life as extraordinary
4A Conversation About Tiffany
5Is Tiffanys End of Life Experience Unique?
6Where do many hospitalized patients die?
7I C U !
8Where do most people say that they want to die?
9Where do you think Tiffany wanted to die?
10How Did Tiffany Suffer?
11- Physical pain
- Symptom burden
- Anonymity
- Loss of choice over destiny
- Loss of dignity
- Loss of consortium
- Separation and lack of connection
- Spiritual
- Financial
12Sources of Pain and Physical Discomfort
- Phantom pain
- Procedure(s) without analgesia
- Clinical condition (sepsis, dialysis,
post-surgical) - Uncomfortable bed
- Preexisting condition(s)?
13- The SUPPORT Study
- Controlled trial to improve care of seriously ill
patients - Five tertiary care teaching hospitals
- Multi-center study funded by RWJ
- 9000 patients with life threatening illness, 50
died within 6 months of entry
14Pain data from SUPPORT Study
of 5176 patients reporting moderate to severe
pain between days 8-12 of hospitalization colon
cancer 60 liver failure 60 lung
cancer 57 MOSF cancer 53 MOSF
sepsis 52 COPD 44 CHF 43 Desbien
s Wu. JAGS 200048S183-186.
15Discomfort Ratings For 16 Common Hospital
Procedures For 165 Subjects
- Severe Discomfort
- Nasogastric tube
- Mechanical ventilation
- Mechanical restraints
- Central line placement
- Moderate Discomfort
- Arterial blood gas
- Urethral catheter
- Mild Discomfort
- IV insertion
- Phlebotomy
- IV catheter
- IM/SC injection
- Waiting for procedures
- Movement from bed to chair
- Chest X-ray
- No Discomfort
- Transfer to a procedure
- Vitals signs
- PO medications
16Analgesic Prescribing For 4003 Nursing Home
Patients with Cancer and Daily Pain
17Why Pain?
- Practitioners are not trained in state-of-the art
pain management - Myths about addiction, dependence, and tolerance
abound - The toll that unrelieved pain takes on the body
and mind is not understood or acknowledged - Fear that pain intervention might cause the
patient to die - Flawed assessments
- Disconnect
- Failure to look at non-physical sources
18Symptom Burden
- Fatigue
- Nausea
- Depression
- Anxiety
- Drowsiness
- Loss of appetite
- Shortness of breath
- GI problems
19Edmonton Symptom Assessment Scale (ESAS Numerical
Scale) Please circle the number that best
describes No Pain 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Worst
Possible Pain Not Tired 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Worst Possible Tiredness Not Nauseated 0 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 Worst Possible Nausea Not Depressed
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Worst Possible
Depression Not Anxious 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Worst Possible Anxiety Not Drowsy 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 Worst Possible Drowsiness Best Appetite 0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Worst Possible Appetite Best
Feeling of Well being 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Worst Possible Feeling No Shortness of Breath 0 1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Worst Possible Shortness of
Breath Other Problem 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
20Anonymity
21Did Anybody Know Who Tiffany Was? What She
Looked Like? What Her illness Meant to Her? What
She Wanted? Who She Needed? Who Needed Her?
22Loss of control over destiny
23No Clear Picture
- Multiple consultants dont talk to each other
- Patients and families receive information in bits
and pieces or not at all or conflicting - Patients wishes/goals not known/elicited
- Advance directives?
- Caregivers not sure of goals/plan
- Lack of interdisciplinary coordination
24Recent Study
- Johns Hopkins Oncology SICU
- Baseline lt10 residents and nurses understood
daily goals of care - After implementation of system,gt95 understood
daily goals of care - LOS decreased from a mean of 2.2 days to 1.1 days
25Loss of dignity
26Separation and lack of connection
27Loss of consortium
28Spiritual Suffering
29Financial Suffering
30Grief and Bereavement
31FUTILITY
32Multi-System Organ Failure
33 34CPR Data
- 133/ 209 patients who died in CCU over 18 months
received CPR - 133 patients underwent 172 episodes of CPR
- One episode was gt 2 hours 5 were gt 1 hour
national recommendations are 10-20 minutes - 16 patients survived no patient who underwent
CPR gt 1 time survived - Healthy person who arrests 30 40 chance
35The Cure - Care Model The old system
D E A T H
Life Prolonging Care
Palliative/ Hospice Care
Disease Progression
36Palliative Cares Place in the Course of Illness
Life Prolonging Therapy
Death
Diagnosis of serious illness
Medicare Hospice Benefit
Palliative Care
37Why hospital-based palliative care? The clinical
imperative
- Hospitals are where the sickest people go and
remain the site of death for many. - Numerous studies document unnecessary patient
suffering. - Patients feel a loss of control and unsafe in
fragmented medical system. - Patients want and will demand better care.
- Family caregiver burden
- Hospitals and clinicians struggling to do their
best, meet JCAHO pain, quality standards
38The Role of Palliative Care
- In-depth and comprehensive assessment
- Pain and symptom management
- Eliciting and establishing goals of care
- Facilitating interdisciplinary communication
- Assisting with difficult conversations and
breaking bad news - Assistance with grief, bereavement, and spiritual
issues and care - Assistance with psychosocial issues
- Education and mentoring
39Palliative Care/Hospice Partnerships
40There is never nothing more we can do.