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Reducing Avoidable Readmissions: The Business and Clinical Impact of Palliative Care. Susan Enguidanos, PhD, MPH enguidan@usc.edu. Agenda. Introduction to & Need for Palliative Care Evidence of Palliative Care Effectiveness Examples of Two Models of Palliative Care:
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Reducing Avoidable Readmissions: The Business and Clinical Impact of Palliative Care Susan Enguidanos, PhD, MPH enguidan@usc.edu
Agenda • Introduction to & Need for Palliative Care • Evidence of Palliative Care Effectiveness • Examples of Two Models of Palliative Care: • Inpatient (Hospital-based) • Home-based • Palliative Care and 30-day Readmissions • Getting Started
Rise in Aggressive Care? Teno et al., 2013
65+ Medicare Beneficiaries ICU Use (Riley & Lubitz, 2010)
Background: Patient & Family Need Current dying experience is far from one that is desired by most Americans • Majority of Americans prefer to die at home (Hays et al., 2001; Gallup, 2000) • 33.5% die at home (2009; Teno et al., 2013) • Patients continue to die in pain (Meier, 2006) • 46% of Do Not Resuscitate orders written within 2 days of death
Palliative Care & Site of Death • Studies show that most people prefer to die at home* • Palliative Care patients more likely to die at home (Brumley, Enguidanos, Jamison et al., 2007) P=.013 *(Townsend, Frank, Fermont, et al., 1990; Karlsen & Addington-Hall, 1998; Hays et al., 2001)
What is Palliative Care? Goal: “…to prevent and relieve suffering & to support the best possible quality of life for patients & their families, regardless of the stage of the disease or the need for other therapies.” What Palliative Care Does: “Expands traditional disease-model medical treatments to include the goals of enhancing quality of life for patient & family, optimizing function, helping with decision making, & providing opportunities for personal growth.” National Consensus Project for Quality Palliative Care, 2013
Curative / remissive therapy Presentation Death Palliativecare Hospice Adapted from Lynn and Adamson, 2003
Core Components of Palliative Care • Interdisciplinary team: MD, RN, SW, Chaplain • Physical, medical, psychological, social & spiritual support • Patient & family education & training • Develop plan of care • Coordinated, patient-centered care
Core Components of Palliative Care • Pain & symptom management • comprehensive primary care to manage underlying conditions • Aggressive treatment of acute exacerbation per patient and family request • Facilitates transfer to hospice if appropriate
Palliative Care Models Hospital-based, Inpatient Palliative Care Programs Home-based Palliative Care
Inpatient Palliative Care (IPC) • Consultative IPC service involves family meeting with patients/family • Follow-up care as needed
Home-based Palliative Care • Eligibility • Diagnosis of congestive heart failure (CHF), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), or cancer • Life expectancy about 1 year • Primary care physician “would not be surprised” if the patient died in the next year • Palliative Care (PC) • Multiple home visits provided by interdisciplinary palliative team • Access to all usual medical care services
Palliative Care vs. Hospice • Physicians not required to give a 6 month prognosis • Patients do not have to forego curative care • Palliative care physician coordinates care to prevent service fragmentation
Inpatient Palliative CareLower Costs of Care Lowered cost by $4855 More days in Hospice care (p= .04) (Gade, Venohr, Connor et al., 2008)
Fewer ICU Admissions at Readmission (IPC) (Gade, Venohr, Connor et al., 2008)
Other IPC Evidence(Morrison et al., 2008) • Comparison Group Study • IPC patients discharged had savings of $1696 in direct costs per admission (p=.004) • $279 in direct costs per day (p<.001) • IPC patients who died had savings of $4908 in direct costs per admission (p=.003) • $374 in direct costs per day (p<.001)
The Economic and Clinical Impact of IPC • Mean daily costs for IPC patients • 33% (p< .01) pre- to post-intervention • 14.5% compared to usual care (p< .01) • LOS 30% • Pain by 86% • Dyspnea by 64% (Ciemins, Blum, Nunley, Lasher, Newman, 2007).
Home-based Palliative Care:Total Service Costs • Adjusted costs of care for PC patients 32.6% less than UC • Saves $7,551 (Brumley, Enguidanos, Jamison et al., 2007) n=292 p<.001
Home-based Palliative Care: Patient Acute Care Service Use (n=297) * P<.01
Home-based Palliative Care Patient Unadjusted Medical Service Use (n=297) * P<.01
30-Day Readmission among Seriously Ill Older Adults: Why Do They Come Back?
Readmission Rates among IPC Patients • Among IPC patients discharged, overall readmission rate = 10% • Overall hospital readmission = 15% • Reduced readmission by 1/3 Enguidanos, Vesper, & Lorenz (2012). 30 day readmissions among Seriously Ill Older Adults. Journal of Palliative Medicine, 1-6.
Type of Care at Discharge (n=408) (Enguidanos et al., 2012)
Readmission Rate by Post Discharge Service Use (Enguidanos et al., 2012)
Predictors of 30 Day Readmit Examined age, gender, ethnicity, marital status, pain, diagnosis, # chronic conditions, anxiety, ADs, and their association with 30 day readmit No Advance Directive 2.7x’s more likely Added discharge disposition to the model Nursing Facility 5x’s & Home (no care) 3.7x’s more likely As compared to discharge to Hospice & HBPC Enguidanos, Vesper, & Lorenz (2012). 30 day readmissions among Seriously Ill Older Adults. Journal of Palliative Medicine, 1-6.
Interviews with Seriously Ill 30-Day Readmits (n=10) CHF & Cancer Patients Three themes identified: • Lack of Support & Purpose • Rehospitalization as appropriate care • Lack of access to care/information
Theme: Lack of Support & Purpose • Lack of support & purpose • Living alone and lack of support • “I wasn’t cooking for myself, I wasn’t doing anything…I just wasn’t eating” • “It’s just a matter of me …motivating me” • “If there was something I could look forward to…”
Theme: Appropriate Care • Hospital care most appropriate for medical condition and treatment preferences “ I get to retaining the fluids again and then right back to where we were [hospital]” • Preference for aggressive care “ I ain’t going nowhere, and I’m fighting”
Theme: Lack of access to care/information • “I should be comfortable. I shouldn’t have to go, ‘Oh, I got pain I need pain meds.’ I shouldn’t be going after pain medication…I was told I should come back to the ER to get my pain medicine.” • “Sometimes I have questions” • “I could have REALLY used a hospital bed” • Inability to physically transport spouse to specialist appt
Discussion • Limited access to holistic care • Enrollment in hospice and palliative care have clear benefits, but problems getting there • Late referrals to hospice • Limited number of home-based palliative care • Most IPC referrals are late in the disease trajectory • Too late to change the course of care or improve quality
Discussion • Lack of continuity problematic: • Quality of life • Most people prefer to die at home. Late transfers increase odds of death in hospital (Gonzalo, 2011). • Care may not be consistent with wishes.
Building a Palliative Care Program • Making the Case for Palliative Care • Designing a Palliative Care Program • Financing a Palliative Care Program • Implementing a Palliative Care Program • Measuring Quality & Impact of Palliative Care Programs Source: Center to Advance Palliative Care www.capc.org
Making the Case:Benefits to Hospitals • Lower costs for hospitals and payers • A systematic approach to caring for outlier patients • Flexible programs support the primary care physician • Meeting JCAHO Accreditation Standards • Easing burdens on staff and increasing staff retention • Meeting the needs of an aging population Source: Center to Advance Palliative Care
Components Needed for Success • Strong Support from Administration • Gather internal/external evidence • Program Champion • ID within or locate (eg, AAHPM Membership) • Palliative Care Training and Mentoring • CAPC, national leaders (eg, von Gunten) • Clarity • Clearly identified goals/mission • Visibility • Case finding, presentations, etc. Source: Davis, Jamison, Brumley, & Enguidanos, 2006