Title: Working Together Providing Quality End of Life Care
1Working Together Providing Quality End of Life
Care
Presented by Jan Nowak LBSW Brenda
Schoenherr Social Worker Program
Director Dowagiac Nursing Home RN, NHA, BBL, MBA
2(No Transcript)
3Interesting Statistic
- Did you know that the studies are showing that
10 to 20 of the residents in a Long Term Care
setting, at any time, are appropriate for Hospice
care?
4Changes in the Environment
- Decreasing Length of Stay
- Increase in number of younger residents
- Increase in complex/high tech admits
- Increase in elderly care givers
- Increase in working care givers
5The Continuum of Care
- ACUTE CARE
- Focus is on active treatment/intervention to
cure, alter or prevent disease and/or to prolong
life. - May include palliative care as part of the
continuum. - Delivered by multiple disciplines in various
modes.
6Curative/Disease Focus
- Diagnosis of disease related symptoms
- Curing of disease
- Treatment of disease
- Alleviation of symptoms
7The Continuum of Care contd
- PALLIATIVE CARE
- Focus is on relief of suffering and improving the
quality of life. - May be combined with curative therapies.
- Delivered in an interdisciplinary manner.
8Palliative Focus
- Pt/family identify unique end-of-life goals
- Assess how symptoms, issues are helping/
hindering reaching goals - Interventions to assist in reaching end-of-life
goals - Quality of life closure
9Location of Death, 1997
www.chcr.brown.edu/dying/forresearcherssod.htm
10Applicability of Palliative Care
Life Closure
Last Hours of Life
Therapy to Modify Disease
Palliative Care
Bereavement Care
Therapy to Relieve Suffering and/or
Improve Quality of Life
6 Mos
Death
Presentation/ Diagnosis
Illness
Advanced Life-threatening
Acute
Chronic
Hospice Care
Attribution Ferris FD, Balfour HM, Farley J,
Hardwick M, Lamontagne C, Lundy M, Syme A, West
P, 2001 Proposed Norms of Practice for Hospice
Palliative Care, Ottawa, ON Canadian Palliative
Care Association, 2001
11Hospice care is always palliative.Palliative
care is NOT always Hospice.
12Why Partner?
- A partnership between the nursing facility and
the hospice interdisciplinary team provides the
best approach to palliative care and optimal
end-of-life experiences for dying residents and
their family members.
13Benefits
- A partnership allows for
- Expertise by varied disciplines from both the
hospice and nursing facility. - Collaborative care planning.
- Resident and family involvement in
decision-making.
14Certification for Care
- To qualify for hospice care a physician needs to
certify that the resident has a life expectancy
of 6 months or less if their illness runs its
expected course.
15 The Medicare Hospice Levels of Care
- There are 4 levels of care provided by Hospice.
- 1. Respite. The resident is entitled to up to 5
days of Respite care usually provided in our
contracted Long Term Care facilities to give the
family a rest period from the care of the
resident - 2. Continuous Care. When the residents symptoms
are out of control, Hospice will provide
continuous care, 11 staffing. Examples of
symptoms out of control include pain, severe
anxiety, nausea/vomiting.
16Level of Care, continued
- 3. Inpatient. The hospice resident may be
admitted to a hospital or in a Long Term Care
facility for treatment or symptoms out of
control. An RN must be on the floor providing
care to meet regulatory compliance. - 4. Home Hospice Care. Hospice Home care visits
are made to residents and caregivers to assess
their needs. The facility is the residents home
and the facility staff are also the primary
caregivers.
17Locations for Hospice Care
- Care can be provided in
- Home
- Nursing Home
- Hospice facilities
- Adult foster care
- Assisted living facilities
- Hospital
18Interdisciplinary team
- RN
- MSW
- Physician
- Medical Director
- Chaplain
- Hospice Health Aide
- Volunteer
- Therapy
- Dietician
- Bereavement
19Medicare Hospice finances
- The Medicare Hospice Care benefit does not pay
for room and board charges. - Under the Medicare and Medicaid Hospice Care
benefit the hospice does pay for - 1. Medications related to the terminal diagnosis
- 2. Durable Medical Equipment
- 3. O2
- 4. Therapy services when in the plan of care
20Medicare Hospice finances continued
- For services to be covered that are related to
the terminal illness they must be a part of the
hospice plan of care
21Coordination and Collaboration
- The Hospice staff supplement the care plan with
the additional problems, goals and interventions
where applicable. -
22Coordination and Collaboration
- The Hospice personnel should conference with a
facility staff member to discuss the resident
visit, any new orders, change in plan of care,
and answer any questions or concerns. This also
facilitates showing coordination in care.
23Hospice Home Health Aide Requirements
- Hospice Requirements
- Long-Term Care Requirements
24Orientation
25Facility Staff Needs to Know
- What is in the contract
- Hospice Philosophy
- Who to call when
- When will hospice staff visit
- How are standing orders managed
- How the facility staff input is included in the
Hospice IDG meeting
26Hospice Staff Need to Know
- What is in the contract
- Facility layout
- Facility chain of command
- Nursing Home Federal and State regulations
- Impact on annual survey
27Hospice Staff Needs to Know, Continued
- Where to document in the chart
- When and where are the resident care conferences
held
28Change in Status
- Hospice and NH staff must derive resident care
decisions from the same core data - Rehabilitation/curative vs. palliative
- Further changes anticipated team review
- Change related to progression of terminal
illness? - Was the change already anticipated and documented
on MDS?
29- In an end-stage disease status, a full
reassessment is optional, depending on a clinical
determination of whether the resident would
benefit from it. The facility is still
responsible for providing necessary care and
services to assist the resident to achieve
his/her highest practicable well being. However,
provided that the facility identifies and
responds to problems and needs associated with
the terminal condition, a comprehensive
re-assessment is not necessarily indicated. - --Source Federal RAI manual, page 2-11
30Need to know.
31Hospice Jargon
- Pre-Active
- Actively Dying
- Comfort Packs
- Bereavement
- LCD, LMRP, NHO Guidelines
32Level of Coverage Determination
33Questions and Answers
34Resources
- Michigan Hospice and Palliative Care
WWW.MIHOSPICE.ORG - Ethics Committee
- Your local Hospice provider
- www.growthhouse.org
- www.lastacts.org
- www.capc.org
35Resources
- www.TNEEL.org
- www.elnec.org
- Means to a Better End A Report on Dying in
America Today (Last Acts, November 2002) - Level of Coverage Determination (LCD)
36The End