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Moving Palliative Care into the Emergency Department: Ensuring ...

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Moving Palliative Care into the Emergency Department: Ensuring ...

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    1. Moving Palliative Care into the Emergency Department: Ensuring the Right Care for Seriously Ill Patients – Right from the Beginning CAPC audio conference January 11, 2007

    3. Importance of the ED Most severely-chronically ill patients enter hospitals through the ED The ED is where goals of care for that episode are determined Treatments are initiated Intensity / trajectory is set Triage (often to ICU) occurs Physicians and staff have (initial) discussions with patients, families

    4. Current Status The Emergency Department’s focus is throughput and disposition, not development of care goals Resource utilization is supply-sensitive and increased intensity & specialist use not correlated positively with quality, outcomes, satisfaction The Care of Patients with Severe Chronic Illness: A Report on the Medicare Program. http://www.dartmouthatlas.org/atlases/2006_Chronic_Care_Atlas.pdf Fewer patients dying in hospitals but intensity of care at EOL is increasing for those hospitalized. Barnato et al (2004) "Trends in inpatient treatment intensity among Medicare beneficiaries a the end of life". Health Services Research 39: 363-375. Quality of care for severely, chronically ill is often poor SUPPORT study; Shugarman, LR, Lorenz, K, Lynn, J (2005). End-of-life care: An agenda for policy improvement. Clinics in Geriatric Medicine 21, 255-272.

    5. Where does Palliative Care fit ? Palliative Care Consultative Services’ care coordination function can: resolve symptoms clarify or change goals of care conduct constructive family meetings resolve patient/family/physician conflict determine discharge plan of care But, most Palliative Care programs are designed to receive consults and referrals after admission, and are not designed to help in the ED or receive patients directly from the ED

    6. How could the scenario change? If PC and ED were better connected we might expect: Improved symptom management More PC consults initiated in the ED More patients admitted directly into PC service or unit from the ED Fewer patients triaged to ICU Better clinical and financial outcomes

    7. SWOT Analysis Strengths ED physicians and triage nurses are the gatekeepers which narrows focus of education Weaknesses Few prototypes of PC-ED connection to date PC services downstream, arriving later in admission Opportunities ED overcrowded, overburdened, under-resourced; ICU’s bottlenecked Threats Lack of education about PC and misperceptions may undermine efforts to improve relationship

    8. Perspective of ED physicians Dr. Knox Todd, Beth Israel Medical Center, NYC “The emergency department is a bottleneck and a staging area—a place of transition for many patients, whether from one health plan to another or one stage of life to another. It’s a place of crisis and opportunity—where changes in treatment philosophy are easier to implement.” Dr Robert Zalenski, Wayne State University “The contemporary physician should be able to assess patients’ needs and support their wishes regarding either time extension and/or a comfort- based approach, whether such decisions need to be made in the emergency department, ICU, medical ward or outpatient setting”. Dr. Tammie Quest, Emory Hospital and Grady Hospice “The focus and goal of emergency medicine is disposition. We need prompt and eager response. If we can even just get someone on the telephone to discuss the case with us, it helps with disposition.” “The hospice and palliative medicine community hasn’t really tapped into us the way they might, but emergency physicians think palliative medicine is a no-brainer. My goal is to bring emergency physicians along to the point where we have established a floor of palliative medicine skills and competencies. But then to have hospital-based palliative care available to respond to the difficult cases would be ideal. The iron is hot for doing this right now.”

    9. Examples of Connecting PC and ED Mount Carmel 3-Hospital system Faith-based, community hospitals Integrated with hospice and home care programs Virginia Commonwealth University Urban, academic medical center, safety net hospital PC consult team, 11-bed dedicated PC unit, and pain / palliative care outpatient clinic in cancer center Presented in: Cassel JB & Lyckholm LJ 2006: Identifying Palliative Care Needs in the Emergency Department: Better Care, Lower Cost. Poster presented at the Southeast regional conference (March 25 2006, Greensboro NC) and the national conference (May 19 2006, San Francisco, CA) of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. With at least one night’s room charge on the PCU, and no room charges for any other rooms. Year = calendar year.Presented in: Cassel JB & Lyckholm LJ 2006: Identifying Palliative Care Needs in the Emergency Department: Better Care, Lower Cost. Poster presented at the Southeast regional conference (March 25 2006, Greensboro NC) and the national conference (May 19 2006, San Francisco, CA) of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. With at least one night’s room charge on the PCU, and no room charges for any other rooms. Year = calendar year.

    10. Mount Carmel Six sigma project to increase direct admits (DA) to PC from the ED PC LOS essentially same for patients either directly admitted from ED or coming to PC later

    11. Mount Carmel Survival for discharge higher % for patients DA than transferred Opportunity to improve throughput Directs patients to most appropriate level of care rather than ICU or telemetry Extensive education and training initiatives to develop “resource team”

    12. Mount Carmel Focus Group Interviews with ED Physicians, Nurses, Social Workers, Chaplains Training of resource team comprised of: MSW’s Case Managers Chaplains

    13. Mount Carmel Focus of training Advance Care Planning Communication and difficult discussions Working with families and patients to establish goals of care Use of algorithm and medical record to identify PC appropriate patients Review of disease specific guidelines

    14. Mount Carmel Establishing tools and resources Algorithm for patient identification PC standardized order set Prompt on ED computerized documentation system

    15. Mount Carmel Establishing tools and resources (cont) Contact information for PC consult service Nursing leadership to facilitate direct admission Patient and family education resources Responsive, collaborative APCU staff, team

    16. Indicators for admission to the palliative care unit or palliative consultation Patient transferring from SNF DNR ( CC or CC Arrest) status established or requested Patient actively dying in pain and discomfort Patient currently enrolled in a community hospice Previously discharged from MC Acute Palliative Care Unit Multiple admissions to the hospital (2 or more within 6 months) with same symptoms

    17. Indicators for admission to the palliative care unit or palliative consultation Patient with advanced disease with frequent infections Nutritional complications with an albumin of less than 2.5mg/dl Primarily bed bound Advanced disease with enteral feeding in place Sudden acute event such as CVA Patient with advanced disease being admitted for Peg/trach placement Disease Triggers: Malignant Neoplasm esp Lung Cancer; Aspiration Pneumonia, COPD, HF, Septicemia, Bone Mets, Renal Failure, Hemorrhagic Stroke

    18. Mount Carmel Data

    19. Mount Carmel Data

    20. Mount Carmel Data

    21. VCU volume

    22. VCU data Presented in: Cassel JB & Lyckholm LJ 2006: Identifying Palliative Care Needs in the Emergency Department: Better Care, Lower Cost. Poster presented at the Southeast regional conference (March 25 2006, Greensboro NC) and the national conference (May 19 2006, San Francisco, CA) of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. Hospital claims data analyzed for all patients registered in the ED, coded as medical DRGs, LOS at least 3 days, adults, and died in the hospital, 2001-2005 (n=728). Cases divided into three groups: did not go to PCU at all during the admission (n=444, 61%), went to PCU after other units (n=232, 31.9%), or went directly to PCU (n=52, 7.1%). Presented in: Cassel JB & Lyckholm LJ 2006: Identifying Palliative Care Needs in the Emergency Department: Better Care, Lower Cost. Poster presented at the Southeast regional conference (March 25 2006, Greensboro NC) and the national conference (May 19 2006, San Francisco, CA) of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. Hospital claims data analyzed for all patients registered in the ED, coded as medical DRGs, LOS at least 3 days, adults, and died in the hospital, 2001-2005 (n=728). Cases divided into three groups: did not go to PCU at all during the admission (n=444, 61%), went to PCU after other units (n=232, 31.9%), or went directly to PCU (n=52, 7.1%).

    23. VCU ED admits ending in death Presented in: Cassel JB & Lyckholm LJ 2006: Identifying Palliative Care Needs in the Emergency Department: Better Care, Lower Cost. Poster presented at the Southeast regional conference (March 25 2006, Greensboro NC) and the national conference (May 19 2006, San Francisco, CA) of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. Hospital claims data analyzed for all patients registered in the ED, coded as medical DRGs, LOS at least 3 days, adults, and died in the hospital, 2001-2005 (n=728). Cases divided into three groups: did not go to PCU at all during the admission (n=444, 61%), went to PCU after other units (n=232, 31.9%), or went directly to PCU (n=52, 7.1%). Presented in: Cassel JB & Lyckholm LJ 2006: Identifying Palliative Care Needs in the Emergency Department: Better Care, Lower Cost. Poster presented at the Southeast regional conference (March 25 2006, Greensboro NC) and the national conference (May 19 2006, San Francisco, CA) of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. Hospital claims data analyzed for all patients registered in the ED, coded as medical DRGs, LOS at least 3 days, adults, and died in the hospital, 2001-2005 (n=728). Cases divided into three groups: did not go to PCU at all during the admission (n=444, 61%), went to PCU after other units (n=232, 31.9%), or went directly to PCU (n=52, 7.1%).

    24. Financial Issues While the financial impact is not the driving reason for connecting the PC and the ED, questions arise that deserve discussion. Palliative care consults conducted for patients 10-20 days after admission may control costs e.g., reduce losses during the last few days prior to discharge or death, and perhaps affect the LOS. They do not affect the DRG in most cases, as they do not change the primary diagnosis or procedure.

    25. Financial Issues In contrast, initiating palliative care in the ED may change the goals of care for that admission, affect the procedures and use of the ICU, and DRG. Therefore both costs and reimbursement may be affected. That being said, at many hospitals typical cases for which PC is brought in late in the case are already financial losses, while relatively short admissions direct to PC may be profitable on average.

    26. Strategies to make it happen Training, education in the ED improving primary palliative care in the ED identifying PC-appropriate patients seeking PC help for most complex patients Marketing increase PC consults in ED Protocols and triggers for consults and direct admissions

    27. Strategies to make it happen ED Observation Units a setting to resolve symptoms and discharge home, or for family meeting and possible PC admission Other ways to make direct admission easier an issue especially on nights and weekends if PC service not 24/7 work with residents and attendings in charge of admissions; hospitalists; etc.

    28. Strategies to make it happen Dedicated PC specialists in ED? few MDs have necessary breadth and depth of training but NPs, RNs and social workers may be able to help identify and increase referrals

    29. Conclusions and Questions While both Mount Carmel and VCU have dedicated units, we do not believe units are necessary for better linking and coordinating PC and the ED The goal is to provide best possible care for patients, right from the start

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