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Chapter 8. Hospice Care

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Chapter 8. Hospice Care Long-Term Care: Managing Across the Continuum (Second Edition) Learning Objectives Define hospice care and those who use it Identify sources ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 8. Hospice Care


1
Chapter 8. Hospice Care
  • Long-Term Care Managing Across the Continuum
  • (Second Edition)

2
Learning Objectives
  1. Define hospice care and those who use it
  2. Identify sources of financing of hospice care
  3. Identify and describe regulations affecting
    hospice care providers
  4. Understand and discuss ethical issues affecting
    hospice care
  5. Identify trends affecting hospice care and the
    impact of those trends

3
What is Hospice Care?
  • Program for people with terminal illnesses
  • End-of-life care

4
How Hospice Care Developed
  • Began as a formal program in England in 1967
  • First American hospice in Connecticut in 1974
  • Has grown rapidly in recent years

5
Philosophy of Care
  • Not a place, but a philosophy
  • Provides support for terminally ill and their
    families
  • Neither prolongs life nor hastens death
  • Focus on comfort (palliative) care
  • Promotes dignity in final days

6
Benefits of Hospice Care
  • Cost-effective alternative
  • Lets patients stay in their homes with their
    families
  • Interdisciplinary team
  • Treats person, not disease
  • Emphasizes quality of life

7
Ownership
  • Many are affiliated with other health care
    organizations
  • Home health care agencies
  • Hospitals
  • SNFs
  • Most are nonprofit
  • Some are freestanding

8
Services Provided
  • Medical Nursing
  • Social Services Counseling
  • Medical Supplies Therapy
  • Pain Management Homemaking
  • Personal care Education

9
Consumers of Hospice Care
  • Terminally ill
  • Cancer Diabetes
  • Heart disease Kidney disease
  • Pulmonary disease Liver disease
  • Neurological AIDS
  • disease
  • Their families

10
Market Forces
  • Cost-effectiveness
  • Desire for control during last days of life

11
Regulations
  • Medicare certification
  • State licensure

12
Accreditation
  • JCAHO
  • CHAP
  • ACHC

13
Financing
  • Medicare
  • Benefit periods
  • Six months or less to live
  • Pays for most services
  • Medicaid
  • Private insurance
  • Self-pay and other sources

14
Staffing
  • Medical Director Personal Physician
  • Nurses Social Workers
  • Hospice Aides Clergy
  • Bereavement Therapists Counselors
    Nutritionists
  • Volunteers Caregiver
  • Patient

15
Legal Ethical Issues
  • Decision to accept hospice care
  • Rights of patients
  • Advance directives
  • Physician-assisted suicide
  • Survival past 6 months
  • Inequitable access

16
Management Qualifications
  • Not regularly licensed
  • Medicare Conditions of Participation

17
Management Challenges Opportunities
  • Coordinating professional and volunteer staff
  • The emotional element
  • Cultural, religious, and ethnic differences
  • Community and philanthropic groups

18
Significant Trends
  • Variation in access and use
  • Later admission, shorter stays
  • Alternative therapies
  • Expansion of eligibility

19
In Summary
  • Hospice care has a long history, but has become
    increasingly attractive in recent years, and
    should continue to grow.
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