Building a Transdisciplinary Approach to Palliative Care in an Acute Care Setting

2013 ◽  
Vol 67 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 43-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donnelle Daly ◽  
Stephen Chavez Matzel

A transdisciplinary team is an essential component of palliative and end-of-life care. This article will demonstrate how to develop a transdisciplinary approach to palliative care, incorporating nursing, social work, spiritual care, and pharmacy in an acute care setting. Objectives included: identifying transdisciplinary roles contributing to care in the acute care setting; defining the palliative care model and mission; identifying patient/ family and institutional needs; and developing palliative care tools. Methods included a needs assessment and the development of assessment tools, an education program, community resources, and a patient satisfaction survey. After 1 year of implementation, the transdisciplinary palliative care team consisted of seven palliative care physicians, two social workers, two chaplains, a pharmacist, and End-of-Life Nursing Consortium (ELNEC) trained nurses. Palomar Health now has a palliative care service with a consistent process for transdisciplinary communication and intervention for adult critical care patients with advanced, chronic illness.

Blood ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 138 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 4103-4103
Author(s):  
Geoffrey McInturf ◽  
Kimberly Younger ◽  
Courtney Sanchez ◽  
Charles Walde ◽  
Al-Ola Abdallah ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: Despite dramatic treatment advances , multiple myeloma (MM) remains a significant source of morbidity and mortality with 13,000 deaths expected annually in the United States. We characterized patterns of mortality, palliative care involvement, and disease course at the end of life for patients with MM over the last decade. Methods: We assessed all consecutive deceased patients with a diagnosis of MM who received health care at a single health care institution from January 2010 to December 2020. Institutional Review Board approval was obtained prior to data review. Descriptive statistics were employed, and chi square was used to compare categorical variables. Results: A total of 456 patients were identified. Patient characteristics and outcomes are listed in Table 1. In the year prior to death, the prevalence of depression was 45.8% (209 patients), whereas 75.4% of patients were on opiates as an outpatient (344 patients). The mean number of lines of treatment received from diagnosis to death was 3 (range 0-12). Two-hundred eleven (46.3%) patients required red blood cell transfusions in the year prior to death. Palliative care physicians saw 207 (45.4%) patients, of which 97 (46.9%) were seen as outpatient (including those who saw both outpatient and inpatient), and 110 (53.1%) exclusively as an inpatient. The median time from first palliative care consultation to death was 10 days for inpatient palliative care (range 0-389 days), and 107 days for outpatient palliative care (range 2-2028 days). Only 42 (9.2%) patients saw palliative care ≥6 months prior to death. Compared to those patients who did not see palliative care, those that saw palliative care ≥6 months prior to death were more likely to be female (61.9 versus 42.2%, p=0.05), younger (median age at diagnosis 66 versus 71, p=0.03), and have a longer survival (46 months versus 35 months, p=0.006) (Table 1 and Figure 1). Amongst the patients for whom place of death was clearly reported (351, 77%), 117 patients (33.3%) died in the acute care setting, 110 (31.3%) died in a hospice facility, and 124 (35.3%) died at home. Outpatient palliative care consultation did not correlate with a statistically significant difference in deaths in an acute care setting (22/81, 27.2% seeing outpatient palliative care versus 57/174, 32.8% for those who did not, p=0.36), or in chemotherapy (any active treatment other than just steroids) utilization in last month of life (30.9% versus 29.7%, p=0.83). Conclusion: In our analysis of the entire trajectory of the MM patient experience from diagnosis to death, we found a substantial proportion of patients with MM report depression, need opiates for pain control, require blood transfusions and are repeatedly hospitalized in the year prior to their death. A fifth of all deaths occur within a year of diagnosis. With a median of three lines of therapy from diagnosis to death, patients may not live to experience therapies reserved for later lines of treatment. A minority of these patients see a palliative care physician during their treatment journey with the median time from palliative care consultation to death only a month. Palliative care referral at this health system is physician-initiated and not based on standard criteria, which may impact these findings. While there is no clear correlation that palliative care consultation impacted the rate of acute care deaths or decreased utilization of MM treatment in the last month of life, (two common but complicated proxies for quality of end-of-life care), further prospective research on optimal utilization of specialist palliative care is required. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures Sborov: GlaxoSmithKline: Consultancy; Janssen: Consultancy, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; SkylineDx: Consultancy; Sanofi: Consultancy.


2021 ◽  
Vol 50 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. i12-i42
Author(s):  
D Hibbert

Abstract   NACEL is a national comparative audit of the quality and outcomes of care experienced by the dying person and those important to them during the final admission in acute and community hospitals in England and Wales. Mental health inpatient providers participated in the first round but excluded from the second round. NACEL round two, undertaken during 2019/20, comprised: Data was collected between June and October 2019. 175 trusts in England and 8 Welsh organisations took part in at least one element of NACEL (97% of eligible organisations). Key findings include Recognising the possibility of imminent death: The possibility that the patient may die was documented in 88% of cases. The median time from recognition of dying to death was 41 hours (36 hours in the first round). Individual plan of care: 71% of patients, where it had been recognised that the patient was dying (Category 1 deaths), had an individualised end of life care plan. Of the patients who did not have an individualised plan of care, in 45% of these cases, the time from recognition of dying to death was more than 24 hours. Families’ and others’ experience of care: 80% of Quality Survey respondents rated the quality of care delivered to the patient as outstanding/excellent/good and 75% rated the care provided to families/others as outstanding/excellent/good. However, one-fifth of responses reported that the families’/others’ needs were not asked about. Individual plan of care: 80% of Quality Survey respondents believed that hospital was the “right” place to die; however, 20% reported there was a lack of peace and privacy. Workforce Most hospitals (99%) have access to a specialist palliative care service. 36% of hospitals have a face-to-face specialist palliative care service (doctor and/or nurse) available 8 hours a day, 7 days a week. NACEL round three will start in 2021.


2019 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 203
Author(s):  
Randol Kennedy ◽  
Nabilah Abdullah ◽  
Rhajarshi Bhadra ◽  
NanaOsei Bonsu ◽  
Mojtaba Fayezizadeh ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 26 (10) ◽  
pp. 1717-1723 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joanne Wolfe ◽  
Jim F. Hammel ◽  
Kelly E. Edwards ◽  
Janet Duncan ◽  
Michael Comeau ◽  
...  

Purpose In the past decade studies have documented substantial suffering among children dying of cancer, prompting national attention on the quality of end-of-life care and the development of a palliative care service in our institutions. We sought to determine whether national and local efforts have led to changes in patterns of care, advanced care planning, and symptom control among children with cancer at the end of life. Methods Retrospective cohort study from a US tertiary level pediatric institution. Parent survey and chart review data from 119 children who died between 1997 and 2004 (follow-up cohort) were compared with 102 children who died between 1990 and 1997 (baseline cohort). Results In the follow-up cohort, hospice discussions occurred more often (76% v 54%; adjusted risk difference [RD], 22%; P < .001) and earlier (adjusted geometric mean 52 days v 28 days before death; P = .002) compared with the baseline cohort. Do-not-resuscitate orders were also documented earlier (18 v 12 days; P = .031). Deaths in the intensive care unit or other hospitals decreased significantly (RD, 16%; P = .024). Parents reported less child suffering from pain (RD, 19%; P = .018) and dyspnea (RD, 21%; P = .020). A larger proportion of parents felt more prepared during the child's last month of life (RD, 29%; P < .001) and at the time of death (RD, 24%; P = .002). Conclusion Children dying of cancer are currently receiving care that is more consistent with optimal palliative care and according to parents, are experiencing less suffering. With ongoing growth of the field of hospice and palliative medicine, further advancements are likely.


2017 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 36-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caroline Shulman ◽  
Briony F Hudson ◽  
Joseph Low ◽  
Nigel Hewett ◽  
Julian Daley ◽  
...  

Background: Being homeless or vulnerably housed is associated with death at a young age, frequently related to medical problems complicated by drug or alcohol dependence. Homeless people experience high symptom burden at the end of life, yet palliative care service use is limited. Aim: To explore the views and experiences of current and formerly homeless people, frontline homelessness staff (from hostels, day centres and outreach teams) and health- and social-care providers, regarding challenges to supporting homeless people with advanced ill health, and to make suggestions for improving care. Design: Thematic analysis of data collected using focus groups and interviews. Participants: Single homeless people ( n = 28), formerly homeless people ( n = 10), health- and social-care providers ( n = 48), hostel staff ( n = 30) and outreach staff ( n = 10). Results: This research documents growing concern that many homeless people are dying in unsupported, unacceptable situations. It highlights the complexities of identifying who is palliative and lack of appropriate places of care for people who are homeless with high support needs, particularly in combination with substance misuse issues. Conclusion: Due to the lack of alternatives, homeless people with advanced ill health often remain in hostels. Conflict between the recovery-focused nature of many services and the realities of health and illness for often young homeless people result in a lack of person-centred care. Greater multidisciplinary working, extended in-reach into hostels from health and social services and training for all professional groups along with more access to appropriate supported accommodation are required to improve care for homeless people with advanced ill health.


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