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This program development workshop focuses on palliative care in safety net institutions. Learn about providing high-quality care to vulnerable populations while achieving cost savings and patient satisfaction. Address end-of-life care disparities and enhance credibility with patients and providers.
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We Bring HealthCARE to Your Community Program Development for Safety Net Institutions Catherine Deamant, MD Director, Palliative Care Services Cook County Health and Hospitals System Coleman Fellowship Workshop September 7, 2013
Definition of Safety Net Institution • Provides significant level of care to low-income, uninsured, and vulnerable populations. • Not dependent upon public vs. non-profit • Core safety net providers: mission to have “open door” to all regardless of ability to pay (high uninsured, Medicaid, vulnerable) • High risk for fragmented care, inadequate community support & high symptom burden
Palliative Care in Safety Net Setting • Goals of palliative care are same as all hospitals: • Provide high quality interdisciplinary care to improve quality of life for patients with serious illness throughout the continuum of care with respect and dignity. • Justifications for palliative care are same for all hospitals: • Cost savings • Patient/family satisfaction • Quality metrics
Palliative Care in Safety Net Setting • Know who you serve • Demonstrate credibility • Identify unique opportunities
Know who you serve: Patients & Families • Lack of access to care means late diagnosis • 40% diagnosed with advanced illness within 3 months of hospitalization (20% on the index admission) • Culturally diverse: • 30% Limited English proficiency • 60% uninsured at time of admission • Fear of financial burden • 8% advanced liver disease (national-2%) • Limited social support • Young population • Average age-58 years
Demonstrate credibility with patients • Address the barriers to quality end of life care through palliative care interventions • Develop relationship with interpreter services • Educate on advance directive as form of empowerment • Address misconceptions of hospice care • Respect wishes for site of death-home is not always a goal • Trust: • PC consult for hospice referral • Build relationship; avoid abandonment • Facilitate goal of return to home country • Must be patient’s goal, not institution’s
Impact on Disparities: End of Life Decisions 173 African-American patients with Cancer seen by PC
Know who you serve: Providers • Emotionally challenging to care for very young patients who are dying with limited resources • Support primary team • Strategies to reduce burnout (especially for PC team) • Majority of consultations for goals of care • Develop hospital-hospice relationship who will share the mission (unless hospital has own hospice) • Be comprehensive in your PC role (address issues of prognosis and resuscitation before referral) • Serve as attending physician • Provide medications for transfer home
Know who you serve: Administration • Palliative care can facilitate more effective utilization of scarce hospital resources • Assist in care planning for chronic, complex patients • Long Stay Committee; Case Management Rounds; Ethics • Identify options for right setting of care • Healthcare Reform • Patient-Centered Medical Home-Priority for ambulatory palliative care • High hospital occupancy rate (challenge for inpatient unit) • Educational Mission • Fellowship; Resident Rotation; Medical Student Rotation
CCHHS Palliative Care Impact Among Medicare Decedents: • Lowest death rates associated with ICU admission • Second lowest hospital deaths • Second highest hospice enrollment • Highest length of stay in hospice care http://www.dartmouthatlas.org, 2003-2007
2012 Statistics: Ambulatory PCCost savings-$840,000-1.2 million 2012: Total number of paracentesis performed-110 home or clinic Assumptions: Hospitalization for paracentesis is 2-3 days with admit thru ED Charge code-49082 at $439