Title: Post Acute Care for the Frail Elderly
1Post Acute Care for the Frail Elderly
- Steven Zweig, MD
- MU School of Medicine
2What is discharge planning?
- Identification of patient needs
- Creation of a care plan that addresses those
needs - Implementing the plan of care
3Why is discharge planning important?
- Hospital stay is brief window in the life of the
patient what comes before and after is just as
important. - Frail elders especially are at risk.
- Poor planning results in failed care plans.
- Poor handoffs result in unnecessary readmissions.
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5Determination of Patient Needs and Resources
- What is the patients functional and cognitive
status? - What are the patient/family preferences for goals
of care and settings of care? - What are the resources of the patient home
assistance, social support, financial?
6Measures of Functional Status
- Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADLs)
- preparing meals
- shopping
- managing money
- using phone
- doing housework
- taking medications
- Activities of Daily Living (ADLs)
- bathing
- dressing
- eating
- toileting
- mobility
- transfer ability
7Dependency in one or more ADLs in Community
Living Elderly
8What is the appropriate care plan?
- What medical interventions must be carried out in
the next phase (e.g. medications, IVs)? - What is the most appropriate setting of care for
the patients needs and resources? - Who needs to be involved in developing and
implementing that plan?
9Implementation of Care Plan
- Selection of post-acute care facility.
- Coordination of plans, transfer, and
prescriptions. - Communication with the next set of providers
handoffs to phyisician, nurses, therapists, etc.
10What special planning needs arise in older
patients?
- Home situation those living alone may not be
able to return after acute episode. - Cognitive function delirium or underlying
dementia are often not detected resulting in
failed discharge plan - Multiple chronic illnesses attention to
dominant problem may complicate others
11Who helps with discharge planning?
- Importance of multidisciplinary teams working
throughout hospital stay - Physicians medical and cognitive function
- Nurses activities of daily living, medications
- Therapists functional abilities
- Social worker matching needs with resources
12How does discharge planning help family
caregivers?
- Often important to smooth transition to home or
another setting of care - Have special information about prior physical and
cognitive status - Needs must be considered work schedules, other
family responsibilities - Use community resources to facilitate family care
13Home Care
- Can be health related such as skilled therapies
or nursing services (wound care, medication
monitoring, etc.) - Can be more social oriented such as assistance
with instrumental activities of daily living,
household chores, personal care
14The Home Care Neighborhood Companies, Services,
Payers and Consumers
Homemaker Services Personal Care Limited
Nursing Commonly called In-Home Major payer
Medicaid Consumer needs are usually long-term,
chronic
Homemaker Services Personal Care Nursing Other
services as needed Commonly called Private
Pay Major payer Private funds, Private
insurance Consumer needs determined by consumer
Nursing Care Personal Care Therapy Services--(PT,
OT, SL) Social Work Commonly called Home
Health Major Payer Medicare,
Medicaid Consumer needs are usually short-term,
acute care Physician ordered patient needs
intermittent skilled care and is homebound
A home care company may have one or all of these
types of programs. These programs have different
laws, rules, regulations and different
governmental agencies responsible for regulatory
oversight, licensing, inspections, surveys,
quality monitoring, etc.
15Physicians role in home care
- Must supervise and approve Medicare sponsored
home care - Must approve home oxygen
- Provide transition back to office based care
- Established historical role in home visits
- Help in assessment of care giver burden
16Current Status of Nursing Homes
- 33 largest chains 23 of all beds (4 are NFP)
- Expenditures 72 billion, Medicaid 47, Medicare
8.2 - 40 billion - 15,220 facilities, 1.66 million licensed bed,
91.4 occupancy, 46 under 100 beds - Medicaid recipients occupy 54 of NH beds
- 51.5 NH beds per 1000 people over 65 - down 2 per
thousand (NY 42/1000, MO 70/1000)
17Demographic implications
- Of those over 85, 15 men and 25 women are in
nursing homes - During next 20 yrs those over 85 increase 5.5
times the general population - If 25 over 85 need nursing home care, NH will
increase 76 in next 30 yrs - If turn 65 in 1990, 43 some time 10 will have
5 or more years
18Roles of the Nursing Home
- Custodial care
- Skilled nursing
- Special care units
- Rehabilitation - stroke, hip fracture
- Subacute care
- Hospice care
- Community center
19Who is at risk for nursing home care?
- Increasing age and frailty
- Mental, behavioral, or physical conditions that
make community care difficult - Functional disabilities that inhibit independent
living - Insufficient social support
- Short of available, affordable, community based
long term care services
20How much does nursing home care cost?
- Average cost is 3000-4000 per month
- Total payments to nursing homes
- Medicare 3-5 - usually first 20 days
- Self-pay 42 - after Medicare runs out
- Medicaid 50 - after private funds run out
- Very small percentage from long term care
insurance
21Staffing in nursing homes
- Every nursing home resident must have an
attending physician most visit the facility 1-2
times per month - Director is RN most of the staff nurses are
LPNs - Most care provided by nurse assistants
- Facilities are chronically understaffed,
turnover, burnout high
22Forces impacting nursing homes
- Increasing population of frail elderly
- Workforce shortage of physicians, RNs, CNAs
- Managed care - diversity, opportunity
- Investor expectations
- Limits in federal spending - social care vs.
medical care - Generations issues - two worker families,
separation - Competition from assisted living and home care
23Nursing homes are not the same
- Quality - inspections of care
- Staffing
- Medical care available
- Prevalence of ACD/DNR
- Dying
24Alternatives to nursing homes
- Within
- Social models of care- Eden Alternative
- Accredited subacute units
- Hospice care for dementia and others
- Outside
- Foster care - Oregon, others
- Assisted living
- Continuing care retirement communities
- PACE (Program All-inclusive Care of Elderly)
25Assisted living facilities
- Definition - varies state to state
- Top ten providers now control 30,000 beds, often
former NH companies - 1995 - 15 billion, 2000 - 30 billion
- Competition with nursing homes for small overlap
population of low-acuity private pay patients - Residents must be able to get out in case of
emergency
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27 What is hospice?
- Hospice is unaffordable.
- Hospice is covered by Medicare, Medicaid,
insurance and offer for uninsured. - Hospice is for cancer patients only.
- Only about ½ are cancer patients.
- Hospice patients cannot see there regular
doctors. - These should continue to follow and bill under
Part B, Medicare. - Patients cannot disenroll when they want.
- False they can opt out at any time.
28Background
- Hospice is a multidisciplinary, patient-centered
approach to palliative care - Most dying patients want was hospice has to offer
- home-based,comfort care - Most dont know about hospice
- 50 die in hospital, 25 in NH, 25 home
- About ¼ of Americans receive hospice care
29 What is hospice?
- Hospice care is guided by an individualized plan
developed and implemented by a multidisciplinary
team including attending physician, medical
director, nurse care manager, social worker,
chaplain - Care plan consistent with preferences of the
patient, including pain and symptom management,
family and spiritual support
30What are the services provided?
- RNs provide direct care and case management
visits as needed, 24 hr call - Social worker assesses and provides support
- Chaplain provides pastoral care
- Medical director supplies oversight and
consultation to team and physician
- Trained volunteers offer companionship
- Home health and homemaker services
- Bereavement care provided for one year
- Therapies as needed
- Physician and other consultations as needed
31What about drugs and equipment?
- These are provided as needed to address the
hospice related condition - Patient responsible for 5 co pay, not to exceed
5 - Durable medical equipment such as commode chairs,
walkers, hospital beds, oxygen supplied without
charge
32Who is eligible for hospice?
- Anyone who is dying
- Medicare, Medicaid, and most insurers have
hospice benefit paid as capitation - Generally intended for those with life expectancy
fewer than 6 months - In 2000, 60 had cancer diagnosis, 80 Medicare
recipients - Guidelines developed for general conditions and
specific diseases
33Do I give up care for my patients?
- The attending physician remains in charge of her
or his patient while working cooperatively with
the multidisciplinary team - Important to collaborate based on goals of care
as defined by patient, surrogate, and team - FPs might get patients after subspecialty disease
oriented care no longer beneficial - Patients can be referred to other parts of care
can be delegated
34How will hospice help me care for my patient?
- Dying patients and their family members need more
help and attention - First contact is hospice nurse, who is available
or on call nurse is at all times - SW and chaplain assessment and visits
- Regular team meetings review care plan and
communicate with attending physician - Services intensified at end, person to call,
bereavement support
35How is hospice different from good home health?
- Share some of the same goals maintaining
function and helping patient stay at home - Home care patients are expected to stabilize and
improve, and terminate when patient no longer
merits nursing or rehab services - Hospice does not require patient to be homebound
- Most hospice does not provide long term inpatient
care (e.g. hospice house or hospital unit)
36If my patient is in hospice, does that mean I
cant treat pneumonia?
- No, but we need to compare every decision with
the patients goals of care - Goals shift from disease oriented to comfort and
improving quality of life - If treating pneumonia helps these, then ok
- May be terminal event that means patient should
be supported with antipyretics, oxygen, and
morphine
37What if my patient doesnt die within 6 months?
- This fear causes reluctance to refer patients
- Average length of stay in hospice was 48 days,
median was 25 days - 33 die within 7 days of referral making it hard
to implement patients plan - Patient reviewed at 3 mos and every 2 mos after
for continuing eligibility - No limit on length in hospice no risk of fraud
for attending physician
38What if my patient wants to opt out, recovers or
doesnt need hospice anymore?
- Any patient can change goals of care and opt out
at any time and then reenroll - Hospice graduates are not uncommon patients
who improve when disease oriented therapies are
terminated
39What is things can be taken care of at home?
- Respite care can be provided for overwhelmed care
givers - Patients can be admitted for intensive management
of symptoms - Both are usually unnecessary
40What do we do in the hospital before hospice?
- Initiate discussions of goals of care
- Use the Comfort Pathway (look for these documents
in Launch Applications in Power chart) - Allow people do die in comfort in the hospital
- For those who do not need the hospital, involve
hospice prior to discharge to enable smooth
transition to home or nursing home
41What about hospice in the nursing home?
- 28 of deaths in Missouri occur in nursing homes
- No patient can receive Medicare sponsored SNF
care and hospice (both Part A) - Hospice can provide care in nursing homes
- Nursing home/ hospice must have contract
- Must share care planning
- New program to facilitate Guidelines for End of
Life Care in Nursing Facilities (Missouri End of
Life Coalition)
42How do I bill for hospice patient?
- Attending physicians bill same either office
based or home codes adding GV modifier - If unrelated to hospice dx use GW modifier
- Consulting physicians bill the hospice itself
43How to learn more about end of life care?
- Care for patients in hospice
- Participate in EPEC training
- Pocket manuals for symptom management
- Ask residency leadership for more talks!
44Summary for Post Acute Care
- Work well with team to assess, plan, and
implement smooth handoffs - Dont forget about communicating well with the
people who will be taking over care - Attend to the preferences of patients and the
needs of caregivers to advocate for safe and
effective care after discharge