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San Francisco Medical Respite: Defining a Successful Discharge

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Briefly describe the San Francisco Medical Respite Program ... Paraprofessional staff (medical assistants, health workers) How do we define a 'good' discharge? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: San Francisco Medical Respite: Defining a Successful Discharge


1
San Francisco Medical RespiteDefining a
Successful Discharge
  • Michelle Nance, RN, NP - Midlevel provider
  • Michelle Schneidermann, MD - Medical Director
  • Shannon Smith, RN,MS,CNL - Intake Coordinator
  • Alice Y. Wong, RN,CNS - Nurse Manager

2
Objectives
  • Briefly describe the San Francisco Medical
    Respite Program
  • Describe measures of success respite programs can
    use when evaluating discharges
  • Describe the internal and external philosophies
    that influence discharge from medical respite
  • Learn to identify and incorporate hospital and
    community needs into discharge planning

3
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4
Mission Statement
  • The mission of the Medical Respite Program is to
    provide recuperative care, temporary shelter, and
    coordination of services for medically and
    psychiatrically complex, homeless adults in San
    Francisco.

5
Values
  • We believe that
  • Every person has the right to housing, health
    care, and food security.
  • All people have the right to self-determination.
  • Every person is valued and entitled to dignity
    and respect.
  • Homelessness is the result of a complex set of
    circumstances and necessitates a multifaceted
    approach toward resolution.
  • A dedicated team can have a positive impact on
    the life of individuals and the community.

6
Vision
  • Our vision is to
  • Encourage healing and stabilization by providing
    respite from homelessness
  • Provide individualized assessment of client needs
    and a comprehensive plan of care
  • Advocate a harm reduction model to decrease the
    negative impact of unsafe behaviors
  • Provide compassionate, nonjudgmental,
    interdisciplinary, and state-of-the-art care
  • Collaborate with local entities to coordinate
    provision of care, options for housing, and
    initiation of entitlement process and
  • Forge relationships with local, regional and
    national networks of those who serve homeless
    persons.

7
The Vulnerable Medically Complex Homeless in SF
8
SF Homeless DemographicsSan Francisco Homeless
Count 2007
  • Done by SF Human Services Agency, March 2007
  • African American/Black 47.6
  • Caucasian 43.4
  • Male 80.2
  • Female 19.4
  • Transgender 0.3
  • Sheltered Homeless
  • Transitional Housing and Treatment Centers
  • Resource Centers and Stabilization
  • Jail
  • Hospital
  • Unsheltered count
  • Total Count n6,377

9
Health and Homelessness
  • The average life expectancy of a homeless person
    is 42-52 yrs (average in US is 80 yrs)
  • Homelessness magnifies poor health
  • Exposes people to communicable illness and trauma
  • Complicates management of chronic illness
  • Makes health care harder to access
  • Homeless patients are more likely to be seen in
    ED and admitted and have longer LOS than other
    patients
  • Salit, S. et al (1998)

10
The Hospitalized Homeless
  • Treatment plans that make sense for housed
    patients dont work for homeless patients
  • No bed for bed rest
  • Difficult to keep wounds clean
  • Adherence to meds and appointments suffers
  • Impossible to follow diet and exercise
    recommendations
  • Often have no support system to help with
    treatment plan

11
Hospitalized Homeless The San Francisco
Experience
  • Around 20 - 30 of patients admitted to San
    Francisco General Hospital (SFGH) are homeless
  • Most of those patients are chronically homeless
  • Safe and effective discharge plans are difficult
    to construct

12
What Respite Offers
  • Successful resolution of acute conditions and
    stabilization of chronic conditions
  • Linkages to additional services
  • Development of plans focused on positive
    long-term changes
  • Recuperation from not only physical illness, but
    also the emotional distress and isolation that
    accompany homelessness

13
Demographics of SF Medical Respite Program
  • Ethnicity (and Gender) Reflect homeless
    population of San Francisco
  • Gender 80 male/20 female

14
San Francisco Hospitals
  • The Medical Respite accepts clients from 10 area
    hospitals.
  • San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center
  • 300 bed acute care public hospital including
    only Level 1 Trauma Center in San Francisco area.
  • Nine other community hospitals
  • Total 2,200 Hospital Beds

15
Referring Hospitals
  • Note Other clients came from outpatient surgery
    and DPH case management programs

16
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17
Discharge Venues in San Francisco
  • Permanent Housing
  • Direct Access to Housing (DAH)
  • Supported (may include SW, CM, RN)
  • Single Room Occupancies (SRO)
  • Non-supported
  • Supported (may include SW, CM, RN)
  • Apartment/ House

18
Discharge Venues
  • Shelter System
  • GA Shelter Bed 30-90 days
  • A Womans Place shelter up to 6 months
  • City shelter Case management up to 6 months
  • City shelter No case management 1 week

19
Discharge Venues
  • Higher Level of Care
  • Board and Care
  • Long Term Care Facility
  • Emergency Department/ Inpatient Services
  • Residential Treatment
  • Hospice

20
Discharge in the Literature
  • Zerger, S (2006) Discharge standard of practice
    is that a clients primary admitting diagnosis
    has been stabilized prior to discharge
  • RCPN practice models state a safe discharge from
    respite care entails follow-up services

21
Program Measures of Success Short Term
  • Completion of treatment plan, including
    demonstrated independence with self-care and
    medication management
  • Improved living situation after discharge from
    Respite
  • Engagement with primary care and specialty care
  • Linkages to social services, benefits
  • Referrals to mental health and substance abuse
    services

22
Medical Treatment Plan Completion
23
Treatment Plan
24
Treatment Plan Completed!
25
Length of Stay by Days and Disposition

26
Discharge Disposition
27
Linkages Made at Respite Medical Services
28
Linkages Made at Respite Social Services
29
Internal and External Philosophies
30
External Philosophies Hospital
  • Enormous amounts of energy are spent
    re-stabilizing many of our homeless clients.
    Rather than successful long-term management we
    frequently are only treating acute exacerbations
    of the chronic conditions. Respite has been able
    to provide stability and management to many of
    our clients.
  • - SFGH Attending Physician

31
External Philosophies Hospital
  • Wed love to see people get into housing,
    especially the frequent flyers. However, we want
    to be able to refer more people and there is
    often a wait for a bed. So we cant refer to you
    Respite if you do not discharge clients to
    shelter, as there are not enough beds.
  • The perfect discharge would have them go into
    some type of housing, an SRO. Transition back
    into the community in some sort of living
    situation, rather than back into the streets.
    But I know we dont live in a perfect world.
  • -SFGH Discharge Social Workers

32
External Philosophies Community
  • Our homeless clients, in general, use our
    ambulances and EDs much more frequently than the
    typical housed client. In addition to
    overburdening the emergency medical service, this
    care does not address their long-term needs. They
    need access to regular medical care and
    medications, stable housing, psychiatric and
    substance abuse services, case managementThe
    ideal scenario would be to establish all of this
    prior to their discharge. To give them a solid
    network of support.
  • -San Francisco Paramedic Captain

33
External Philosophies Community
  • We have few expectations of what you do for
    clients because we assume they dont have
    anything. What we like about Respite is at least
    their medical linkage is done.
  • -SF HOT (Homeless Outreach Team) Case Manager

34
Referral Difficulty
  • Inpatient teams often express the enormous
    pressure they are under to discharge their
    clients.
  • We need to discharge today

35
Referral Difficulties
  • Inappropriate referrals lead to difficult
    discharges
  • Need higher level of care than indicated
  • Incontinence, dementia, not competent, not able
    to care for ADLs
  • No acute medical need but a number of
    co-morbidities needing longer-term management
  • What is the end point for discharge?

36
Internal Philosophies
  • Multidisciplinary staff
  • Nursing, midlevel providers, MD
  • Administration
  • Social workers
  • Paraprofessional staff (medical assistants,
    health workers)
  • How do we define a good discharge?
  • How do our internal philosophies match our stated
    mission?

37
What Is a Good Discharge?
  • Our biggest discharge issue is the lack of
    available, affordable quality supportive
    housing.
  • John Wiskind, LCSW
  • In reviewing success, we look at whether
    people are still housed a year later.
  • Mark Hamilton, MSW
  • Individual housing is the gold standard
  • Cindy Lee, RN

38
What Is a Good Discharge?
  • Completing the acute medical need, but thats
    balanced with the need to more permanently
    offload burden from the emergency services and
    hospitals.
  • Michelle Nance, NP
  • Completion of acute medical condition without
    being readmitted into the hospital.
  • Shannon Smith, RN

39
What Is a Good Discharge?
  • A bad discharge is when we have to call the
    police. A good discharge is when we have done all
    we can do for someone.
  • Jeanne Andaya, MEA
  • The acute medical need is done.
  • Tae-Wol Stanley, NP, Program Director
  • The medical need is done, they are started with
    linkages, and discharged with reliable follow up
  • Alice Wong, RN, Nurse Manager

40
What Is a Good Discharge?
  • A good discharge means that while at respite, a
    patient has completed his/her treatment plan,
    engaged in primary care, learned self-care and
    medication management skills, and has begun the
    process of transitioning into permanent housing. 
    There are some patients too vulnerable to be
    discharged from respite back to the shelter
    system and a successful discharge for those
    patients would include a move from respite
    directly into permanent housing.  While in my
    fantasy world, all patients would discharge into
    permanent housing, the real world of limited
    resources forces us to triage.
  • -Michelle Schneidermann, Medical Director

41
What Is a Good Discharge?
  • At minimum a resolution of a medical issue in
    an environment that is less costly and more
    normalized than the hospital. Even a short time
    (10-15 days) of recuperation that can be done at
    Respite rather than inpatient is cost saving. A
    good discharge is when a client leaves better
    equipped to find a next phase of a residential
    setting. Id like to see direct uninterrupted
    access to a bed in the system, whether shelter,
    treatment, stabilization or permanent housing.
  • - Mark Trotz, Director, Dept of Housing and
    Urban Health

42
Internal Philosophies
  • Staff have different philosophies shaping their
    discharge decisions
  • Can lead to confusion and conflict for both staff
    and clients
  • Of note no clients were asked for a definition
    of a successful discharge for this presentation

43
Who Gets Prioritized for Housing?
  • Older
  • In our population, 50 years old is old
  • Medically frail
  • COPD requiring oxygen
  • Hemodialysis
  • Terminal or severe cancer diagnosis
  • Amputation, paralysis
  • Tired
  • Done with the player lifestyle
  • Willing to engage
  • Most unstable/disruptive to system
  • Heavy Emergency Services use

44
Pre-Hospital Living Situation
45
Living Situation at Respite Discharge
46
Living Situation
  • 51 of clients had a change in living situation
    for the better
  • 44 of clients had no change in living situation

47
Is Individual Housing the Gold Standard of a
Discharge?
  • What a lot of clients need is a mom and thats
    what they get at Respite nagging, reminders,
    family and friends, increased social
    interactions, meals. They lose this in housing.
  • Cindy Lee, RN
  • We tend to think of housing as the gold
    standard, but for many clients having an
    individual room doesnt work they decompensate
    in that situation.
  • John Wiskind, LCSW

48
Is Housing the Gold Standard?
  • Supportive Housing (SH) programs become less
    willing to take our clients because the clients
    are too sick/disorganized
  • SH asked to be hospice lite staff gets
    overburdened and burned out
  • Should we prioritize less sick clients for SH
    instead of the most fragile so theres more
    success?
  • Are there other options?

49
Next Steps?
  • Creating more communal living situations
  • Smaller group homes with support services
  • Encouraging community in SROs
  • Foster creation of Medical Rest Beds in Shelters
  • For clients who are awaiting housing
  • Communal living
  • Medical/social support
  • Free up Respite beds for acute needs
  • Get more data
  • Who do we really house?
  • Outcomes for housed
  • Objective 911 calls, hospital readmits,
    evictions
  • Subjective clients perceived mood, substance use

50
Next Steps?
  • Re-examine our internal philosophies on discharge
  • Create more objective measures for who we hold
    for housing
  • Assessment tool
  • transplant waitlist
  • Formalize team discussions of referrals
  • e.g., a tumor board for housing
  • Respite Alumni Network

51
Incorporating These Philosophies into Discharge
Planning
  • Identifying when housing IS the gold standard and
    appropriate
  • Ex Client is medically complex and ready to
    engage
  • Triaging and creating individualized discharge
    plans based on medical and psycho-social need and
    willingness to engage
  • Education and understanding that sometimes a
    successful discharge does not include a direct,
    uninterrupted discharge to housing

52
Case Studies
53
Mr. B
  • 66 year-old man with a long history of asthma,
    COPD, asbestos exposure, tobacco and alcohol
    abuse, and depression, who was admitted to the
    hospital for pneumonia.
  • X-ray and CT scan of the chest showed large
    masses in his lungs
  • Confirmed to be extensive small cell lung cancer
  • Started on chemotherapy and transferred to
    Medical Respite 6 days later

54
Mr. B At Respite
  • Admitted on January 31, 2008 for assistance with
    follow-up chemotherapy treatment and appointments
  • Stayed at Respite for 78 days until discharge
    into Supportive Housing
  • Stopped drinking
  • Reconnected with his daughters in OK

55
Mr. B After Respite
  • Came back to visit and showed us pictures of his
    granddaughters after a visit to see his family in
    OK
  • Had last day of chemo and decided to celebrate
  • Relapsed for 9 days when his case manager finally
    found him
  • Was admitted to a detox facility
  • Returned to supportive housing
  • January 2009 entered hospice care
  • March 2009 Mr. B died in hospice

56
Mr. M
  • 33 year-old man with a history of poorly
    controlled diabetes, polysubstance abuse,
    depression, post-traumatic stress disorder,
    schizoid personality disorder, admitted to the
    hospital for DKA.
  • Immigrant from DRC
  • History of being boy soldier, imprisonment, and
    torture
  • Poor adherence to insulin regimen
  • Admitted to Respite for stabilization of blood
    glucose levels while awaiting follow-up
    appointment with primary care provider

57
Mr. M At Respite
  • Challenges
  • Cultural Issues
  • Complex psychiatric history
  • Brittle diabetic
  • Behavior at Respite
  • Compliant with medication regimen and medical
    needs
  • Patient split between professional and
    paraprofessional staff
  • Threatened to kill a Respite Worker

58
What Would You Do?
59
What We Did
  • No tolerance policy for violence
  • Partnered with patients pre-existing case
    manager
  • Behavioral contract until case manager could find
    alternative place
  • Capitalized on respect for clinical staff to
    continue managing his medical need
  • Case manager was able to secure a 28-day
    stabilization room 24 hours later

60
Mr. C
  • 52 year old man with history of CHF, CAD, CVA
    with L hemiparesis and slurred speech w/c bound
    hidradentitis suppurativa microcytic anemia
    HTN Hep B Hep C. 35 pack-year tobacco history
    denies ETOH or SA
  • Left buttock wound with fistula
  • Staying in shelters and had been unable to do
    wound care on own so presented to the Wound Care
    Clinic.
  • Was hospitalized for a left buttock abscess and
    fistula
  • Referred to Respite for ongoing wound care of the
    perirectal area and bilateral buttock and to f/u
    with PCP for his microcytic anemia.
  • Also needed IHSS worker

61
Mr. C At Respite
  • Respite cannot offer a hospital bed
  • Was not independent with bathing required
    two-person assist with bathing and wound care
  • Not always compliant with wound care and hygiene
    recommendations
  • Lost Section 8 housing and wait list was long for
    ADA room
  • IHSS worker would be helpful, but needed housing
    first
  • Wound began to worsen
  • Was found with frank blood soaked through clothes
    and sheets on bed from the wounds

62
What Would You Do?
63
At Respite Mr. C
  • Engaged with Mr. Cs primary care provider
  • Wound was to extent it needed surgical repair
  • Even if Mr. C went to housing with IHSS, an IHSS
    worker could not offer the kind of care the wound
    needed
  • Issues
  • To high level of care for Respite
  • With the PCP we decided to discharge
  • pts choice - shelter or hospital for FTT
  • Agreed to admit to SFGH for FTT
  • Respite Case Manager recently saw him at SFGH
    walking in the halls with a walker!

64
Mr. A
  • 62 year old male s/p R hip fracture, hx of ETOH
  • Admitted first to Respite and went AWOL the same
    day
  • After 48 hours a hospital search found he had
    fallen while acutely intoxicated and refractured
    his hip
  • Readmitted to Respite 1 week later

65
Mr. A At Respite
  • Engaged with FSA Case Manager
  • Decreased ETOH intake
  • Gained weight
  • Expressed desire for treatment program
  • Respite challenge 290 status (sex offender)

66
Mr. A At Respite
  • Realities of 290 status in San Francisco
  • No inpatient treatment program in SF takes 290
    status
  • Shelters discharge someone with 290 status
  • No inpatient treatment program in Alameda County
    will take 290 status, either

67
What Would You Do?
68
Mr. A
  • Medical Treatment Plan completed
  • Engaged with primary care provider who he sees
    when he doses
  • Went to stabilization room through FSA case
    manager
  • Detox and ETOH treatment plan left to primary
    care provider

69
Ms. L
  • 84 year old female with history of HTN, Afib,
    anemia, and CHF
  • This was her only hospital admission on record at
    SFGH
  • Admitted to Respite to finish antibiotics for BLE
    cellulitis
  • No family involvement. Her only child and only
    sister have both died.

70
Ms. L At Respite
  • Finished antibiotics
  • Received wound care
  • Engaged in primary care through Bridge Clinic
  • Through ongoing primary care she became more
    medically complex and unable to self-manage her
    medications
  • Accepted into supported senior housing in
    brand-new building
  • Ms. L refused this housing stating, its too
    new.
  • Found competent and not conservable

71
What Would You Do?
72
Ms. L
  • Had 122-day length of stay
  • Bridged primary care to Curry Senior Center that
    provides case management to low income seniors
  • Discharged to shelter with case management
    through Curry Senior Center
  • Respite received sad news Ms. L died at St.
    Francis Hospital on May 1, 2009

73
So What Is the Definition of a Successful
Discharge?
  • No single definition of a good discharge
  • We have identified two different conceptions of a
    good discharge
  • Client discharges to a specific place
  • Client has received services and links to
    services during stay
  • In your community you have to balance your
    external and internal philosophies

74
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