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Are You Ready to Assess For Distress?. Lee Tremback, MA, LCSW, OSW-C Oncology Social Worker Eastern Connecticut Cancer Institute John A. DeQuattro Cancer Center Manchester, CT. National Comprehensive Cancer Network Psychosocial Care Guideline Panel. Formed in 1997 Goals:
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Are You Ready to Assess For Distress? Lee Tremback, MA, LCSW, OSW-C Oncology Social Worker Eastern Connecticut Cancer Institute John A. DeQuattro Cancer Center Manchester, CT
National Comprehensive Cancer Network Psychosocial Care Guideline Panel • Formed in 1997 • Goals: • Identify patients needing psychosocial help • Address barriers to psychosocial care caused by stigma of psychological/psychiatric problems • Develop ways for patients to obtain psychosocial resources
National Comprehensive Cancer Network Psychosocial Care Guideline Panel • 28 Panel Members: • 15 female, 13 male • 16 psychiatrists/psychologists • 4 oncology physicians • 4 nurses • 2 social workers • 1 chaplain • 1 patient advocate
Definition of Distress: A multifactorial, unpleasant experience of an emotional, psychological, social, or spiritual nature that interferes with the ability to cope with cancer, its physical symptoms, and its treatment. Distress extends along a continuum ranging from normal feelings of vulnerability, sadness, and fear to disabling conditions such as clinical depression, anxiety, panic, isolation, and existential or spiritual crisis.
Institute of Medicine 2007 Report • Cancer Care for the Whole Patient: Meeting Psychosocial Health Needs • Recommendations: • Screen for distress and psychosocial needs • Make a treatment plan to address these needs and implement it • Refer to services as needed for psychosocial care • Reevaluate with plan adjustment as appropriate
NCCN 2012 Standards of Care • Distress should be recognized, monitored, documented & treated promptly at all stages of disease & in all settings. • Screening should identify the level & nature of the distress. • All patients should be screened to ascertain their levels of distress at the initial visit, at appropriate intervals & as clinically indicated, especially with changes in disease status. • Distress should be assessed & managed according to clinical practice guidelines.
NCCN 2012 Standards of Care (cont’d) • Interdisciplinary committees implement standards for distress management. • Educational & training programs developed for health care professionals & certified chaplains • Licensed mental health professionals & chaplains readily available . • Insurance contracts include reimbursement for mental health services.
NCCN 2012 Standards of Care (cont’d) • Patients, families should be informed that management of distress is an integral part of total medical care; provided with info about psychosocial services • Quality of distress management programs should be included in CQI. • Clinical measurements should include assessment of the psychosocial domain
American College of Surgeons (ACoS)Commission on Cancer (CoC) • Cancer Program Standards 2012: Ensuring Patient-Centered Care • Must be in place by 2015 • Standard 3.2: Psychosocial Distress Screening
Psychosocial Distress Screening • S 3.2: The cancer committee develops and implements a process to integrate and monitor on-site psychosocial distress screening and referral for the provision of psychosocial care.
Compliance requires: • Screen patients at least once during the cancer patient’s course of treatment; this screening should occur during a pivotal medical visit. • Patients are screened using a standardized, validated instrument with established clinical cutoffs. • Cancer programs are not penalized for developing their own instrument and constructing their own cutoff scores.
Where to start? Gradual Implementation: • 1st Radiation Oncology (private practice) • 2nd Medical Oncology (private practice) • 3rd Ambulatory Medical Unit (hospital-based) • 4th Inpatient Units
What is the cutoff score? • No right or wrong answer • Can always change later • We chose 5
Definition of Pivotal Medical Visit: • Radiation Oncology – teaching visit during 1st/2nd treatments. • Medical Oncology – during 1st chemo visit • AMU – during 1st chemo visit • Inpatient – if diagnosed during hospital stay and getting chemo
Standardized, validated instrument • After 6 month trial using NCCN instrument, reviewed our experiences: • Physical problems already assessed by nurses • Didn’t address Advance Directives, personal care needs, family health issues, etc. • Didn’t like calling them all problems • Needed more thorough assessment of depression
Write your policy • Emphasize that patients are continually assessed by the cancer center treatment team for physical, psychological, social, financial & spiritual distress • Include: • Timing of Screening • Method • Tools • Assessment & Referral • Documentation
Assessment & Referral • If score is over 5: • Identify & examine the psychological, behavioral & social problems of patients that interfere with their ability to participate fully in their health care and manage their illness and its consequences. • Confirm the presence of physical, psychological, social, spiritual, and financial support needs. • Indicate the need to link patients with psychosocial services offered on-site or by referral.
Documentation • Screening, referral or provision of care, and follow-up are documented in the medical record. • “Referral received re: pt had a score of 6 on distress screen due to __________.” • “Patient provided with info on CHR energy assistance program.” • “Will continue to assess patient for depression.”
Reporting to Cancer Committee • Determine data collection process • Design quality improvement study • Timeliness of intervention after screening • How many referrals to social worker, chaplain, behavioral health come from distress screening? • Are all patients screened at least once?