Clinical interventions, economic impact, and palliative care

Author(s):  
Patrick J. Coyne ◽  
Thomas J. Smith ◽  
Laurel J. Lyckholm

Economic outcomes are increasingly important for all types of healthcare, including palliative care. There are substantial opportunities for improvement by using disease management strategies and care pathways. Directed, ethically motivated interventions about futile care appear to produce significant cost savings. The use of advance directives or hospice care may be good medical care, but have not been shown to produce major economic benefit. Integrated palliative care teams have been shown to reduce hospital and end-of-life care costs for seriously ill patients. For treatment to be justified, there must be some demonstrable improvement in disease-free or overall survival, toxicity, quality of life, or cost effectiveness.

2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 997-1002
Author(s):  
Tsvetka Boycheva ◽  
Mariya Dimitrova

Palliative care satisfies the physical, mental, social, cultural and spiritual needs of terminally ill patients. They target the family and loved ones of the sick, provide support and training, help people overcome the grief and sorrow of losing a loved one. Palliative care for a lot of people becomes a necessity at some point in their lives, enabling them to adequately complete their earthly journey. The patients undergoing these care have gone through diagnosis and treatment and are in the last stages of their lives, filled with much suffering, pain and hopelessness. The purpose of this study is to determine the extent to which the healthcare system is able to meet the specific needs of patients in need of palliative care. The study focuses on 602 relatives of seriously ill patients and 376 healthcare professionals caring for terminally ill patients. Using a direct individual survey, their opinion was examined. Statistical methods have been used to process and analyze the results. The study was conducted from 01.11.2017 to 30.11.2018 in a total of 30 hospitals, hospices and social homes in the country. Results: Almost half of the healthcare professionals surveyed (46.0%) devised an individual care plan for each patient, and every third of the seriously ill relatives (36.8%) felt that they were tailored to the individual needs of each patient. In the current health care system, the offered palliative care is able to meet patients' physical and social needs, but their mental, spiritual and cultural needs remain somewhat unmet. Conclusions: The lack of sufficient time to communicate with the patient and the lack of staff in the healthcare system are the reasons for the unmet need of the terminally ill. Creating training programs for healthcare professionals to improve their communication knowledge and skills, as well as the inclusion of different specialists in palliative care teams, will increase care coverage and improve the quality of life of seriously ill patients and their families.


2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (4) ◽  
pp. 290-293 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth K. Vig

Context: Patients in medical intensive care units (MICUs) are medically complex. This complexity can lead to uncertainty about patient goals and prognosis. Ethical dilemmas arise when there is uncertainty about the clinically and ethically appropriate actions for managing seriously ill patients. Ethics and palliative care involvement may promote improved quality of care and reduced staff moral distress. Project Description: In this clinical project, a physician with ethics, palliative care, and geriatrics expertise attended morning rounds with the MICU team weekly. Data on the logistics and impact from the first 2 years of the project were collected. Project Logistics and Preliminary Impact: Rounds lasted approximately 1.75 hours per week. The rounder was present for discussion of approximately 200 patients per year and made comments on nearly half of the patients. The comments were categorized as 25% ethics, 40% palliative care, 10% geriatrics, and 25% a combination or other topic. Attending physicians rated the project as helpful. The number of ethics and palliative care consults from the MICU increased in the first 2 years. Downstream impact has included a dietician reviewing Physician Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment forms with teams throughout the hospital and routine review of advance directives of newly admitted patients. Discussion: Weekly MICU rounding provides an opportunity to briefly teach staff and trainees about relevant ethics, palliative care, and geriatrics issues. It also provides a forum for discussion of ethically challenging cases. Considerations when starting a similar program are discussed.


Author(s):  
Daisy Fancourt

Palliative care is support for seriously ill patients and their families. The aim of palliative care is to minimize pain and discomfort as much as possible and provide psychological, social, and spiritual support. An important part of palliative care is end-of-life care, which aims to improve quality of life as much as possible while patients are alive and then help them to die with dignity....


Aquichan ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-3
Author(s):  
Clare Butt

During this COVID-19 global pandemic, seriously ill patients rely on nurses more than ever. Providing care in the altered environment of the pandemic can be stressful for nurses and the interdisciplinary team. Faced with limited time and resources, restricted visiting of family members and loved ones, and the changing science affecting treatments, nurses are extraordinarily challenged. Fortunately, nurses can benefit from integrating palliative care nursing skills into all levels of care. Because palliative care is holistic, improves the quality of life, and focuses on both the patient and the family, it can assist nurses—from acute care to home care settings—in managing symptoms, communicating with empathy, and discussing care decisions. Importantly, despite the enormous stress of these uncertain times, nurses can take the time to care for themselves and thereby find the strength to continue caring for patients.


2020 ◽  
pp. 15-18
Author(s):  
Nina Tishchenko

The article reflects the importance and importance of the work of nurses of the Department of Palliative Care for Oncological Patients of the State Budget Health Establishment «Samara Regional Clinical Oncological Clinic». Important stages and features of care when dealing with seriously ill patients.


2018 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 62-71
Author(s):  
Henry O’Lawrence ◽  
Rohan Chowlkar

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to determine the cost effectiveness of palliative care on patients in a home health and hospice setting. Secondary data set was utilized to test the hypotheses of this study. Home health care and hospice care services have the potential to avert hospital admissions in patients requiring palliative care, which significantly affects medicare spending. With the aging population, it has become evident that demand of palliative care will increase four-fold. It was determined that current spending on end-of-life care is radically emptying medicare funds and fiscally weakening numerous families who have patients under palliative care during life-threatening illnesses. The study found that a majority of people registering for palliative and hospice care settings are above the age group of 55 years old. Design/methodology/approach Different variables like length of stay, mode of payment and disease diagnosis were used to filter the available data set. Secondary data were utilized to test the hypothesis of this study. There are very few studies on hospice and palliative care services and no study focuses on the cost associated with this care. Since a very large number of the USA, population is turning 65 and over, it is very important to analyze the cost of care for palliative and hospice care. For the purpose of this analysis, data were utilized from the National Home and Hospice Care Survey (NHHCS), which has been conducted periodically by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics. Descriptive statistics, χ2 tests and t-tests were used to test for statistical significance at the p<0.05 level. Findings The Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) was utilized for this result. H1 predicted that patients in the age group of 65 years and up have the highest utilization of home and hospice care. This study examined various demographic variables in hospice and home health care which may help to evaluate the cost of care and the modes of payments. This section of the result presents the descriptive analysis of dependent, independent and covariate variables that provide the overall national estimates on differences in use of home and hospice care in various age groups and sex. Research limitations/implications The data set used was from the 2007 NHHCS survey, no data have been collected thereafter, and therefore, gap in data analysis may give inaccurate findings. To compensate for this gap in the data set, recent studies were reviewed which analyzed cost in palliative care in the USA. There has been a lack of evidence to prove the cost savings and improved quality of life in palliative/hospice care. There is a need for new research on the various cost factors affecting palliative care services as well as considering the quality of life. Although, it is evident that palliative care treatment is less expensive as compared to the regular care, since it eliminates the direct hospitalization cost, but there is inadequate research to prove that it improves the quality of life. A detailed research is required considering the additional cost incurred in palliative/hospice care services and a cost-benefit analysis of the same. Practical implications While various studies reporting information applicable to the expenses and effect of family caregiving toward the end-of-life were distinguished, none of the previous research discussed this issue as their central focus. Most studies addressed more extensive financial effect of palliative and end-of-life care, including expenses borne by the patients themselves, the medicinal services framework and safety net providers or beneficent/willful suppliers. This shows a significant hole in the current writing. Social implications With the aging population, it has become evident that demand of palliative/hospice care will increase four-fold. The NHHCS have stopped keeping track of the palliative care requirements after 2007, which has a negative impact on the growing needs. Cost analysis can only be performed by analyzing existing data. This review has recognized a huge niche in the evidence base with respect to the cost cares of giving care and supporting a relative inside a palliative/hospice care setting. Originality/value The study exhibited that cost diminishments in aggressive medications can take care of the expenses of palliative/hospice care services. The issue of evaluating result in such a physically measurable way is complicated by the impalpable nature of large portions of the individual components of outcome. Although physical and mental well-being can be evaluated to a certain degree, it is significantly more difficult to gauge in a quantifiable way, the social and profound measurements of care that help fundamentally to general quality of care.


2017 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 308-309 ◽  
Author(s):  
Justin Sanders ◽  
Joshua Lakin ◽  
Rachelle Bernacki ◽  
Catherine Arnold ◽  
Joanna Paladino

2019 ◽  
Vol 72 (7) ◽  
pp. 1229-1235
Author(s):  
Ewa Kucharska ◽  
Aleksandra Kucharska ◽  
Aleksander Sieroń ◽  
Mariusz Nowakowski ◽  
Karolina Sieroń

The palliative care patient is definitely a unique type of patient. Due to the complexity of the symptoms requires a holistic therapeutic approach. Modern methods of treatment in palliative and hospice care underline an important role of physio, kinesiotherapy and pharmacological treatment coexistence. The rehabilitation reduces clinical symptoms, accompanying the basic disease and increases the quality of life of palliative patients and their families. It becomes an inseparable element of treatment, both in outpatient care as well as in stationary care and home care. Due to the high dynamics onset of cancer in the group of geriatric patients there is a need for a broader analysis of the topic. The goal of palliative care is to achieve the best possible quality of life for patients and their families.


Pained ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 203-206
Author(s):  
Michael D. Stein ◽  
Sandro Galea

This chapter assesses palliative care. Palliative care focuses on improving the quality of life for people with life-threatening illnesses by involving a team of nurses, doctors, social workers, and clergy in a care plan. Hospice care—administered in dedicated units and in services delivered at home—has been slowly expanding over the past two decades, but the increasing percentage of patients who use hospice for less than 7 days suggests that the full benefits of end-of-life palliative care are not being realized. Meanwhile, the use of unwanted, aggressive end-of-life care, often inconsistent with patient preferences, remains pervasive. For palliative care to be effective, it must be supported by government policies and insurer incentives; it must also be owned by communities, which must continue to ask for help in designing and paying for high-quality palliative care for patients and their caregiving families.


1993 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-41 ◽  
Author(s):  
David M. Dush

The hospice movement grew in part as a reaction to the perception that modern medical care had become too technological at the expense of being impersonal and insensitive to human psychological and spiritual concerns. In the United States, the institutionalization of hospice care under Medicare and other reimbursement systems has further established hospice as an alternative to high-technology, high-cost care. The present paper examines the question: What if hospice care becomes itself high-technology, aggressive, costly health care in order to remain true to its goal of maximizing quality of life? Implications for the goals and philosophical underpinnings of palliative care are discussed.


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