Title: FATE: Family Assessment of Treatment at End-of-life
1FATE Family Assessment of Treatment at
End-of-life
- David J Casarett MD MA
- CHERP, Philadelphia VAMC
- Division of Geriatrics University of Pennsylvania
2VA Mission To Honor Veterans Preferences for
Care at the End of Life
- "VA must offer to provide or purchase hospice
palliative care that VA determines an enrolled
veteran needs." - 38 CFR 17.36 and 17.38
3How well are we doing?
- Data are needed
- To identify problems
- To distinguish high- vs. low-performing
facilities - To guide improvement efforts
- To shape policy related to
- Funding
- Workforce
- Health care systems organization
4Quality measurement opportunities in VHA
- Opportunity to translate data into policy
- Opportunity for a public health
approach/population-based - Data-rich health care system and Electronic
Medical Record
5Data availability sets the VA apart Potential
for nationwide quality measurement
- Structures of care
- Consult services
- HVPs
- Inpatient units
- Processes of care
- Consults
- Referrals to hospice
- Outcomes (provide answers to key policy-relevant
questions) - Do palliative care consults improve care?
- Does home hospice improve care?
6Background
- HSRD-funded instrument development project
- Multisite
- 5 sites in initial phase (current)
- 15 sites in feasibility test
- Preliminary version approved by Office of
Management and Budget as a quality tool (10/06) - Planned for review as a Type III (mandatory)
Directors performance measure
7Approach
- Afterdeath telephone interview of families
- Enrolled veterans who had at least one healthcare
contact with the VA in the last month of life - Inpatient, outpatient, and NHCU deaths
- Eligibility
- National death bulletin notifications
- Chart review
- Letter to families
- Telephone call (approximately 2 months after
death)
8Epidemiology of the veteran population (2005)
- 24,000,000 living veterans
- 687,000 projected veteran deaths (2005-2006)
- 100,000 enrolled deaths
- 29,000 inpatient deaths
VA is responsible
VA is accountable
Only the VA is accountable
http//www.va.gov/vetdata/demographics/index.htm
9Sites (Phase I)
- Philadelphia
- Birmingham
- West Los Angeles
- Louisville
- Lebanon
10Domains
- Well-being and dignity (5 items)
- Communication (4 items)
- Care consistent with preferences (2 items)
- Symptom management (4 items)
- Care around the time of death (5 items)
- Emotional/spiritual support (4 items)
- VA services (3 items)
- VA death benefits (3 items)
- Admitted to facility of choice (1 item)
11Reporting
- Anonymous (self-identified only)
- Domain scores and rankings
- Future case-mix adjusted
- www.caringforveterans.org
12Site-specific feedbackwww.caringforveterans.org
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15Value to the VA Examples of 3 policy-relevant
questions
- Do palliative care consults improve care?
- Does home hospice improve care?
- Is home hospice better than inpatient palliative
care?
16Value to the VA Do PC consults improve care?
(FATE score, n309)
- Yes 86 vs. 64 (plt0.001)
- Adjusted for age ethnicity, income,
diagnosis (cancer vs. non-cancer), and site.
17Value to the VA Does hospice improve care for
deaths at home? (FATE score, n143)
- Maybe 89 vs. 85 (not significant)
- BUT Significant interaction by site (e.g.
hospices in some cities have a greater effect
than in others). - Adjusted for age, ethnicity, income,
diagnosis (cancer vs. non-cancer) and LOS.
18All hospices are not equal
- Died at home with hospice
- Range across sites (means) 43-78 (P0.010)
- Small variation in VA service scores
- Larger variation in VA death benefits
- Large variation in communication, care around the
time of death, and symptoms
19No place like home?
- Died at home with hospice
- FATE score mean 67 (IQ range 45-76)
- Died in a VA hospital with palliative care
- FATE score mean 76 (IQ range 64-82)
- (P0.014)
20Preliminary results summary
- Inpatient PC improves care
- Home hospice probably improves care
- There is substantial variation among hospice
programs - Inpatient PC may be as good as home hospice care
21Next steps
- Approval for QI use
- Approval as a national quality measure
- Rollout nationally
- Central administration?
- Central data collection
- Routine reporting and integration into VISN
quality initiatives
22Collaborators Support
- FATE collaborators and supporters
- Ken Rosenfeld MD
- Christine Ritchie MD MPH
- Scott Shreve MD
- Christian Furman MD
- Amos Bailey MD
- Tom Edes MD
- Diane Jones MSW
- VA RCD 00008-01 and ARCDA
- VA HSRD IIR 03-128-2
- VA CPP 217
- VA CSP 476
- Center for Health Equity Research and Promotion
- R01 CA109540-01
- Paul Beeson Physician Scholars Award
- NIH K01 AI 01739-01
- Hartford Foundation
- VistaCare Foundation
- Commonwealth Fund
- Greenwall Foundation
23Questions
- How to integrate with FEHC?
- How could these data be useful to hospices?
- How could hospice partner with VA facilities to
help them improve their FATE scores?