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Hospitalists and Palliative Care: A Win-Win Partnership

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University of California, San Francisco. UCSF Palliative Care Leadership Center ... Personal and professional satisfaction. Work with great interdisciplinary team ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Hospitalists and Palliative Care: A Win-Win Partnership


1
Hospitalists and Palliative CareA Win-Win
Partnership
  • Steven Pantilat, MD
  • Eva Chittenden, MD
  • Palliative Care Program and Palliative Care
    Leadership Center
  • Hospitalist Division
  • Department of Medicine
  • University of California, San Francisco

2
Hospitalists and Palliative Care Alignment of
Goals
  • Both groups are dedicated to
  • Improving quality of care
  • Increasing patient and family satisfaction
  • Enhancing appropriate allocation of resources
  • Supporting hospital priorities
  • Increasing efficiency
  • Passing JCAHO visit

3
Link Between Hospitalists and Palliative Care
  • Half of Americans die in hospitals
  • Many more have chronic illness and palliative
    care needs
  • 98 of Medicare decedents spent at least some
    time in the hospital in the last year of life
  • Hospitalists are becoming the de facto
    providers of palliative care for many
    hospitalized patients

4
Advantages of Hospitalists for Inpatient
Palliative Care
  • Small group of physicians cares for most
    inpatients
  • Care for patients throughout the hospital
  • Present in the hospital
  • Understand how hospital systems works
  • Familiar with the cost savings financial
    argument
  • Accustomed to working with interdisciplinary teams

5
Hospitalists and Palliative Care
  • Hospitalists have defined palliative care as a
    core competency
  • Hospitalists recognize importance of palliative
    care
  • Presence of hospitalists associated with success
    in starting palliative care program

Pantilat et al. Arch Int Med 2006166227-30
6
Hospitalists and Palliative Care
4.7
4.8
4.6
3.3
Plauth et. al. Am J Med, 2001111247-54
7
Evidence that Hospitalists May Improve Palliative
Care
  • Academic-affiliated, community hospital with
    housestaff
  • Of patients who died, those cared for by staff
    hospitalists vs. community physicians
  • Had fewer symptoms in last 48 hours of life
  • Were more likely to have communication regarding
    care (91 vs. 73)

Auerbach and Pantilat Am J Med 2004116669-75
8
How Hospitalists Contribute to a Palliative Care
Service
  • Lead implementation of a palliative care service
  • Join a team planning a palliative care program
  • Join an existing palliative care team
  • Become a palliative care consultant to other
    physicians including hospitalists
  • Refer patients to an existing palliative care
    service
  • Support the establishment of a palliative care
    service
  • Participate in guideline development and quality
    improvement in palliative care

9
Reasons That a Hospitalist Would Do Palliative
Care
  • Add variety to job
  • Do more of what you are good at and like
  • Personal and professional satisfaction
  • Work with great interdisciplinary team
  • Diversify funding stream
  • Palliative care pro-fee billing
  • Institutional support
  • Acquire expertise within generalism
  • Help institution achieve prestige, quality, and
    other goals

10
Challenges for Hospitalists to Participate in
Palliative Care
  • Lack training and expertise in palliative care
  • Cannot provide continuity of care
  • See a limited spectrum of end-of-life care
  • Immersed in culture of the hospital

11
Challenges for Hospitalists to Participate in
Palliative Care
  • Most hospitalist programs are extremely busy
  • No excess capacity to add palliative care
  • Consider nurse clinical leader to lessen demand
    on hospitalist
  • Combine palliative care with another activity
    to create a full days work
  • Secure funding to support participation of
    hospitalists

12
Overcoming Challenges
  • Support clinical training in palliative care for
    hospitalists
  • Goal of palliative care board certification for
    all participating hospitalists
  • Recruit more than one hospitalist
  • Account for days off
  • Get technical assistance in starting a palliative
    care program
  • Palliative Care Leadership Center

13
Palliative Care Educational Resources- Clinical
  • EPEC Project
  • http//www.epec.net/EPEC/webpages/index.cfm
  • AAHPM Educational Programs
  • http//www.aahpm.org/education/index.html
  • Harvard PCEP Program
  • http//www.hms.harvard.edu/cdi/pallcare/
  • Online and written materials
  • http//www.capc.org/palliative-care-professional-d
    evelopment
  • http//www.eperc.mcw.edu/index.htm

14
Palliative Care Leadership Centers
  • Technical assistance for establishing palliative
    care programs
  • Focus on hospitalists and palliative care at UCSF
    PCLC
  • 6 sites around the country
  • For info www.capc.org

15
Conclusion
  • There is a natural link between hospitalists and
    palliative care in improving quality of care,
    satisfaction, and resource utilization for
    seriously and terminally ill hospitalized
    patients
  • Hospitalists can lead, participate in, or refer
    to a palliative care service
  • Palliative care can contribute to hospitalist job
    diversity and satisfaction
  • To succeed, hospitalists need to obtain clinical
    expertise and programs need technical assistance
  • Ultimately a win-win for all involved-
    hospitalists, palliative care programs,
    hospitals, and patients
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