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Title: POLST: Respecting Patient Wishes Near the End of Life Author: Terri Schmidt Last modified by: Alexander Ginsburg Created Date: 6/4/2000 10:17:10 PM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: POLST: Respecting Patient Wishes Near the End of Life


1
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2
Palliative care and POLST in the emergency
department
  • Terri Schmidt MD, MS
  • Professor of Emergency
  • Attending Inpatient Palliative Medicine Team
  • OHSU
  • February, 2012

3
Goals of Care
  • What were you hoping would happen when you came
    to the emergency department today?
  • What has your doctor told you about what you can
    expect in the future?

4
If I have cancer or something, resuscitation
is a waste of time, because you know youre going
to die.  I would like to be in a hospice
situation where there is someone to hold your
hand or make sure you are comfortable.
5
ED Palliative Medicine Consults
  • In house Monday through Friday 9am to 5 pm
  • After 5 pm by phone Monday through Thursday (Goal
    24/7)
  • Consider admission to OBS with am consult (can
    put electronic order request in EPIC)
  • Inpatient Ed consults Eric Walsh MD, Paul
    Bascom MD, Terri Schmidt MD, Mary Denise Smith
    Advance Practice Nurse
  • Outpatient appointments Eric Fromme MD, Paul
    Bascom MD

6
Emergency Rule
  • patient lacks decision capacity
  • no one legally authorized to act for patient is
    available
  • serious risk of bodily injury or death if a
    decision is not made quickly
  • a reasonable person would consent

7
Surrogate decision makers
  • Standard
  • Patient expressed preferences
  • Best interest
  • Hierarchy
  • Legally appointed guardian
  • Durable power of attorney for health care
  • Spouse or partner of a registered domestic union
  • Majority of adult children
  • Parent
  • Majority of adult siblings
  • Other friend or relative
  • Attending physician

8
Determining capacity
  • Risks and benefits explained to patient
  • Patient understand risks and benefits
  • Make decision based on life values and goals
  • Consistent over time
  • ability to communicate a decision
  • Reassess for each decision

9
ED physician non-beneficial
  • No obligation to provide non-beneficial
    interventions
  • Based on goal of intervention

10
Definitions
  • Advance directives
  • Directive to physicians/living will
  • Power of attorney for health care
  • Do not attempt resuscitation-DNAR
  • POLST and POLST paradigm

11
ADVANCE DIRECTIVE POLST
For whom For all adults  For persons of any age with advanced illness
Purpose To express values and appoint a surrogate (future wishes) Medical orders which turn a patients values into action (applies today)
Guide actions by Emergency Medical Personnel Usually not Yes
Guide treatment decisions in the hospital Yes Yes
12
What Is POLST
  • A health care providers order
  • Can be completed by others (SW, RN) but must be
    signed by MD, DO, NP or PA
  • May be a verbal order from one of the above,
    signed by an RN
  • Consistent recognized document

13
Development of POLST
  • Consensus development
  • Began in 1991
  • Newest revision June 2011
  • Voluntary process in Oregon, legislated in some
    other states including Washington
  • Endorsed programs in 12 states and developing in
    over 30
  • National POLST Taskforce

14
Elements of the POLST Paradigm
  • Medical order form
  • Accompanies patient
  • Bright, unique color (Pink in OR, green in WA).
    New ePOLST may not be colored
  • Training of professionals
  • DNAR orders
  • Limit or provide other interventions
  • Decisions about transport, ICU, artificial
    nutrition

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If I am unconscious at the last moment then I
dont want any machines or anything.
18
Oregon Rules
  • EMT Scope of Practice OAR 847-35-0030(6).
  • The Oregon Medical Board has defined the Scope of
    Practice so that an Oregon-certified First
    Responder or EMT shall comply with
    life-sustaining treatment orders executed by a
    physician, physician assistant or nurse
    practitioner
  • Oregon Medical Board OAR 847-010-0110
  • The fact that a physician, physician assistant or
    nurse practitioner who executed a life-sustaining
    treatment order does not have admitting
    privileges at a hospital or health care facility
    where the patient is being treated does not
    remove the obligation under this section to honor
    the order.
  • Mandate for signers to enter POLST into Registry
    unless patient opts out. Completion of a form is
    voluntary

19
Requirements for a Form Valid
  • Patient name
  • Resuscitation orders
  • Health professional signature and date
  • all other information is optionalin Oregon it
    does not require signature of patient
  • (verbal orders signed by an RN are acceptable)

20
Validation of POLST
  • Dunn PM, Schmidt TA et al A method to
    communicate patient preferences about medically
    indicated life sustaining treatment JAGS
    199644785
  • Tolle SW, Tilden VP, Nelson CA, Dunn PM A
    Prospective study of the efficacy of the POLST
    JAGS 1998461097
  • Lee MA, Brummel-Smith K et al Physician orders
    for life-sustaining treatment (POLST) Outcomes
    in a PACE program JAGS 2000 481-6.

21
  • Schmidt TA, Hickman SE, Tolle SW, Brooks HSThe
    Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment
    Program Oregon Emergency Medical Technicians
    Practical Experience and Attitudes JAGS
    2004521430-34.
  • Hickman SE, Tolle SW, Brummel-Smith K, Carley MM
    Use of POLST (The Physician Orders for
    Life-Sustaining Treatment Program) in Oregon
    Nursing Facilities JAGS 2004521424-2
  • Hickman SE, Nelson CA, Perrin NA, Moss AH, Hammes
    BJ, Tolle S A comparison of methods tp
    communicate treatment preferences in nursing
    facilities Traditional practices versus the
    physician orders for life-sustaining treatment
    program JAGS 2010 Jul58(7)1241-8.

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Section A Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR)
24
  Section B Medical Interventions
12/29/2020
25
Section C Artificially Administered Nutrition
12/29/2020
26
Section D DOCUMENTATION OF DISCUSSION
12/29/2020
27
Signatures
12/29/2020
28
Legal case
  • Can I be liable for not honoring a form?
  • California case
  • Case filed against an ED physician for not
    honoring a POLST order to not intubate

29
Difficult situations
  • Family conflict
  • How do you interpret Attempt Resuscitation and
    Limited Interventions?
  • Trauma

30
Suicide
  • Emergency physicians may be required to care for
    patients at the end-of-life who attempt suicide
    (without physician assistance)
  • Physicians should counter the medical effects of
    suicide attempt unless such measures would only
    prolong the dying process or would be ineffective

31
  • Schmidt TA, Hickman SE, Tolle SW, Brooks HS The
    Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment
    Program Oregon Emergency Medical Technicians
    Practical Experience and Attitudes JAGS
    2004521430-34

32
Methods
  • Anonymous survey mailed in 2002 to a stratified
    random sample of Oregon paramedics and
    EMT-Intermediates

33
Findings
  • 572/1048 (55) response rate
  • 76 male
  • 66 paramedics

34
  • 73 had treated a patient with a POLST
  • POLST, when present, changed treatment in 45 of
    patients

35
  • 75 thought POLST provided clear instructions
    about patient preferences
  • 93 thought POLST useful in determining treatment
    when patient in cardiopulmonary arrest
  • 63 thought it useful in other circumstances

36
  • 25 reported some difficulty finding the form
  • 87 were filled out appropriately
  • 6 had conflicting orders
  • 5 unsigned
  • 2 incomplete

37
  • It was not followed in 37 (10) cases
  • 17 changed by family or other care giver on scene
  • 9 changed by patient
  • 8 changed by physician/EMT/hospital

38
Case Study When POLST Works
39
Where to keep the POLST
  • The front of the chart
  • In a red envelop on the fridge (but people do not
    like it)

40
The Oregon POLST Registry
  • Emergency Medical Services, emergency departments
    and hospital acute care units

41
What is it?
  • Secure electronic registry of POLST orders.
  • Located at the Emergency Communication Center at
    OHSU and protected by the OHSU firewall
  • Allows health care professionals access to POLST
    orders if the original POLST form cannot be
    immediately located

42
  • Over 80,000 forms currently in Registry
  • Entering about 3200 new forms/month

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Calls as of January 31, 2012
  • 1085 calls
  • 335 matches
  • 31 match rate

48
Reasons for Calls 12/3/2009 to 8/31/2010
  • 183 EMS the Registry
  • 93 calls (51) were for patients with trauma,
    SOB, acute illness but not arrest
  • 38 calls (21) patients in cardiac arrest
  • 16 calls (9) patients with terminal illness
  • 3 calls (1) were patients in respiratory arrest

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50
Users
  • Emergency departments 46
  • EMS 36
  • Acute care 17

51
How to access the a POLST in the Registry
  • Call the ECC (4-7551 or 4-7333)
  • They need enough info to accurately ID patient
    (usually can get it from EPIC
  • Name
  • Date of Birth
  • Gender
  • Last 4 SSN
  • POLST Registry ID
  • Address

52
How do I access the POLST Registry?
  • Call the 24 hour POLST Registry
  • Say, This is ______________ agency/emergency
    department, with an immediate POLST form request

Provide as much as possible of the following
patient information, to the Registry staff
  • Full name
  • Date of Birth
  • Gender
  • Last 4 SSN
  • POLST Registry ID
  • Home address/residential care facility address
  • City, County, or zip code

53
What information will be provided?
  • Section A and B orders, the date the form was
    signed, and the POLST Registry ID number.
  • Hospitals can be faxed the POLST form.
  • EMS Confirm your destination hospital and a copy
    can be sent ahead
  • THE STAFF ARE NOT MEDICAL PROVIDERS AND CANNOT
    INTERPRETPOLST ORDERS

54
Pain Management
  • Trick of the trade
  • Free IPhone app Opioids

55
Equianalgesic dosesof opioid analgesics
  • Morphine (MS) 1 mg IV 3 mg po
  • MS 30 mg po oxycodone 20-30 mg po
  • Hydromorphone 1mg IV MS 7 mg IV
  • MS 5 mg IV fentanyl 50 mcg

56
. . . Changing opioids
  • Cross-tolerance
  • start with 5075 of equianalgesic dose
  • more if pain not well controlled, less if adverse
    effects

57
Breakthrough dosing
  • Use immediate-release opioids
  • 515 of 24-h dose
  • Do NOT use extended-release opioids
  • Avoid acetaminophen toxicity

58
Allergy vs. adverse effect
  • Opioid-induced nausea/vomiting, constipation,
    drowsiness, confusion are NOT allergic reactions
  • Anaphylaxis, urticaria, pruritus with rash but
    RARE
  • If true allergic reaction, replace with opioid
    of a different class

59
Urticaria, pruritus (no rash)
  • Morphine, hydromorphone, usually not fentanyl
  • Mast cell destabilization followed by histamine
    release
  • Manage with antihistamines or change to fentanyl

60
Trick of the tradepain crisis
  • Morphine 1 mg IV q minute to total 10 mg,
    monitoring at bedside for effect, somnolence,
    respiratory depression
  • Wait 10 minutes
  • Repeat until satisfactory pain control
  • (Alternatives hydromorphone .2 mg or fentanyl 20
    mcg)

61
Pathophysiology nausea/vomiting
62
Antiemetics
  • Dopamine antagonists haloperidol,
    prochlorperazine, droperidol, promethazine,
    metoclopramide (also prokinetic)
  • Antihistamine diphenhydramine
  • Anticholinergic Scopolamine
  • Serotonin antagonists ondansetron, granisetron
  • Other dexamethasone, THC, lorazepam
  • Trick of the trade Haloperidol is a great
    antiemetic!

63
Antacids
  • H2 receptor antagonists
  • cimetidine
  • famotidine
  • ranitidine
  • Proton pump inhibitors
  • omeprazole
  • lansoprazole
  • Misoprostol

64
My mother was choking. Called 9-1-1 because her
lips were blueput her on the floor and did CPR.
The medics came and took over. I told them she
had a POLST but I couldnt find itthe form used
to be on the fridge but we got a new one and
hadnt moved it there yet. I that day her
wishes were honored. Daughter of pt   The
daughter was the one who informed first
responders that the patient had a POLST form
which prompted us to call the RegistryAll
life-saving measures were terminated as soon as
orders were announced to honor end of life
wishesThe Registry is a good thing. It is a
stressful time for family and the ability to call
and get the wishes is really helpfulMedic on the
scene
65
The pt was very old and in cardiac arrest. There
was a language barrier at the scene and we were
trying to ask the daughter if he had a POLST.
Daughter came back with magnet. Without them the
family the POLST would have never been known to
existoverall, it call to the Registry was
successful. -Medic on the scene
66
The pt was very old and in cardiac arrest. There
was a language barrier at the scene and we were
trying to ask the daughter if he had a POLST.
Daughter came back with magnet. Without them the
family the POLST would have never been known to
existoverall, it call to the Registry was
successful. -Medic on the scene
67
We had dinner, he was holding the placemats,
and he just went down and collapsed. There was
no eye contact, no voice contact. I called 9-1-1
and my son and daughter-in-law came overasked if
they wanted to override the POLST and we decided
no. This is what he wanted. His wishes were
definitely honored. EMS was professional,
quick, and efficient... The Registry is a
wonderful idea. Should be more publicized so
people know where to put it POLST form -Wife
of pt
68
The Oregon POLST Registry
  • Emergency Communication Center at OHSU
  • 503 494-7333 (MRH)
  • 888 476 5787 (1-888 4-POLSTS)
  • E-mail polstreg_at_ohsu.edu
  • Website
  • http//www.ohsu.edu/polst/programs/OregonPOLSTRegi
    stry.htm

69
POLST Information
  • Center for Ethics in Health Care, OHSU
  • 503 494-3965
  • Fax 503 494-1260
  • Ethics_at_ohsu.edu
  • www.polst.org
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