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This Presentation Is Sponsored By. Atlantic Region. Nova Scotia Hospice Palliative Care Association Annual Conference 2011. HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE CARE Roots Reality Reaching Out. Dr Nigel Sykes St Christopher's Hospice London. “I want what is in your heart and what is in your mind”.

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  1. This Presentation Is Sponsored By Atlantic Region

  2. Nova Scotia Hospice Palliative Care Association Annual Conference 2011 HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE CARERootsRealityReaching Out Dr Nigel SykesSt Christopher's HospiceLondon

  3. “I want what is in your heart and what is in your mind”

  4. David Tasma 1911-1948 Inspirer of the modern hospice and palliative care movement Dame Cicely Saunders 1918-2005 Founder of the modern hospice and palliative care movement

  5. Where did Palliative Care come from? • Hospice and Palliative Care began as a healthcare reform initiative inspired by: • The perceived failure of existing cancer care • The particular failure of doctors to deal adequately with dying patients • At heart it has therefore always been medical in nature • But firmly centred on the patient experience

  6. Initial planning of St Christopher’s • The initial emphasis was on care : • “Patients must be able to see the life of the world outside and yet not have the light in their eyes or the draught round their necks.”

  7. A Three Part Vision • St Christopher’s was legally registered in 1961 • Care was now joined by research and teaching: • Provide care both in the Hospice and in patients’ homes • Encourage the teaching and training of doctors and nurses • Promote research into the care and treatment of the dying • Construction commenced in March 1965 • St Christopher’s opened in July 1967

  8. The Prospectus for St Christopher’s The Hospice “will try to fill the gap that exists in both research and teaching concerning the care of patients dying of cancer and those needing skilled relief in other long-term illnesses and their relatives.” Saunders, 1967

  9. How would the Vision be worked out? • An in-patient unit • An out-patient clinic • Continuity of care for patients able to go home, through a domiciliary service • Involvement of relatives in care • Bereavement care • Teaching in all aspects of care • Research into control of symptoms and mental distress Saunders, 1967

  10. St Christopher’s Hospice 850 patients and families on any one day Services free to users 48 in-patient beds 900 admissions each year Serves a diverse population of 1.5 million people 15% non-malignancy Independent charity £15 million annual budget

  11. Hospice has Grown Up • It gave rise to Palliative Care • By 1975 (Balfour Mount, Montreal) • It became a “Movement” • By 1978 (Sandol Stoddard) • It spread: • Usually by inspiring dynamic individuals re-creating Hospice in locally adapted versions • A strength? • Not often by governments • A weakness? • It can save money and lengthen life (Temel et al., 2010)

  12. Progress with the Vision Care • UK: • 217 hospices • 160 voluntary (72%) • 3194 beds • 2519 voluntary (80%) • 308 Home care teams • 345 Hospital support teams • 279 Day hospices (Hospice Information, 2011) • Palliative care exists in 115 countries worldwide (International Observatory on End of Life Care, 2006)

  13. Progress with the vision Teaching • Palliative care routinely taught in UK medical schools • Specialty or sub-specialty training schemes for palliative medicine in UK, Ireland, USA, Australia, New Zealand • Nursing, medical and multiprofessional degree and diploma courses • Major international conferences on five continents

  14. Progress with the vision Research • Thirteen UK professorial chairs related to palliative care and over 30 internationally • At least 12 peer-reviewed English-language journals primarily devoted to palliative care research and development • Regular national and international meetings dedicated to palliative care research

  15. In the United Kingdom • Hospice and Palliative Care have become routine • Palliative Medicine has been a recognised specialty for nearly 25 years • With training schemes – just like any other specialty • Palliative Care has entered government policy • The Cancer Plan 2000 • National Institute for Clinical Effectiveness Guidance 2004 • End of Life care Strategy 2008 • Hospices have Care Quality Commission regulation

  16. But was it meant to be like this? • Palliative Care remains an anomaly in the UK health system • A specialist service provided mostly outside the NHS: • British hospices raise nearly $Can 1.5 million a day from charitable sources to keep going • Fragmented, individualistic, unplanned • In 1980 the Wilkes report said no more in-patient hospices should be built (but most have been opened since then) • Hospices devoting more effort to funding issues than service delivery and performance? • Still largely cancer-orientated • Nearly 20 years after the SNMAC/SMAC report

  17. Symptoms in cancer and non-cancer conditions

  18. Progress with the Vision? • 16% of cancer deaths occur in hospices • 23% of cancer deaths occur at home with the involvement of a hospice team • 50% of cancer deaths occur in hospital • 7% of hospice patients have a non-cancer condition • 0.2% of non-cancer deaths occur in a hospice • Deprived and minority ethnic groups under-represented in hospices

  19. Progress with the Vision in Canada? • No more than 30% of Canadians currently have access to or receive hospice care • In some areas the figure is 16% • Variable funding arrangements according to province, setting and health plan • 25% of the total cost of palliative care is borne personally by families • Only 6 out of 13 jurisdictions have nursing/personal care 24/7 • Almost 70% of deaths occur in hospital • 40% of terminally ill cancer patients visit the emergency department within the last two weeks of life • 41% of long term care home residents have at least one hospital admission in their last six months of life (CHPCA, 2010)

  20. Hospices – and Palliative Care • Are hospices an intrinsic part of the palliative care vision? • “We went out in order to go back in again” • “There is need for diversity in this field” • Historically, the vision was brought to life through hospices • What is their place now?

  21. A bit more vision… “A few hospices will be needed for… intractable problems, research and teaching, …but most patients will continue to die in hospitals, cancer centres or their own homes; the staff they will find there should be learning how to meet their needs” Saunders, 1978

  22. Society is changing • Family splits and dispersal • Ethnic and cultural diversity • Ethnic minorities make up 8% of the UK population but only 3% of hospice deaths • An ageing society • The number of over 65 year olds in Canada has doubled in less than 30 years… • …and will double again in the next 25 years • The annual number of deaths in Canada will increase by 33% by 2020

  23. Society is changing • More chronic illness • 80% of Canadians over 65 have a chronic illness • Nearly 60% have two or more chronic illnesses • Increased personal aspirations • Increased expectations of healthcare • But not necessarily the money to pay for them • Shrinking workforce relative to the numbers who need to be looked after • Changing patterns of volunteering

  24. The Choice Agenda • “No decision about me without me” • Palliative care for all who need it • When they need it • Where they want it • How they want it • The choice of death • Physician-assisted suicide/euthanasia?

  25. How do Hospice and Palliative Care respond to these societal changes and pressures?

  26. Taking the Palliative Care Vision into the future… Means bringing physical, psychological, social and spiritual care to all dying people who need it This can only happen if Palliative Care becomes an integral strand of healthcare and gains stable funding

  27. The Hospice Vision is about transforming healthcare If this is to happen we must: • Influence the generalists • Share our knowledge and facilities • Open up our care: • Increase the number of people we care for • Improve access across disease labels • Maintain quality • Contain costs

  28. Currently Hospice Care receives huge public support - Why? • It is there for people and their social networks at the most emotionally traumatic life transition • It is widely perceived to do what it promises – giving of mind and heart • It makes other bits of the health and social care systems work in the way they are supposed to Strong public support means that government support can continue to be niggardly (‘Big Society’ in action?)

  29. The Dilemma for a Palliative Care service • Investment in a social worker is likely to result in enhanced quality of care for current patients but not much increase in patient numbers • Investment in another nurse may increase access to more patients but not quality of care for current patients (Tebbitt, 2006)

  30. Is our Choice: • Icebergs of Excellence versus • A Sea of Mediocrity ?

  31. “Mainstreaming excellence”(Going back in again) Better care for the dying should become a touchstone for success in modernising the NHS. This is one of the really big issues — we must make it happenNigel Crisp (NHS Chief Executive), 2008

  32. Taking the vision into the future… • How do we “mainstream excellence”? • To provide UK hospice deaths to NICE standards for all who want them would entail a transfer of £1,300m from hospitals • The risk is a reduction to a symptom control service focused only on the patient’s obvious physical needs • A little for a lot (Randall and Downie, 2006) • Can we maintain a balance? • Rather more for rather more

  33. Palliative Care In-Patient Units (Hospices?)? • Access to specialist palliative care beds is needed • Not necessarily many: • In 1991 St Christopher’s used 62 beds to support a home care case load of 85 patients • In 2011 St Christopher’s has 48 beds for a home care case load of 850 patients • But they produce better outcomes than a consult service alone (Casarett et al., 2011) • They ought to deal with complexity • How do you maintain the staff to do that if your unit is very small?

  34. UK Department of Health End of Life Care Strategy Palliative care now has a prominence it has never had before • “How we care for the dying is an indicator of how we care for all sick and vulnerable people. It is a measure of society as a whole and a litmus test for health and social care services” End of Life Care Strategy 2008

  35. Making Palliative Care an integral strand of healthcare(According to the UK End of Life Care Strategy) • The key is a whole systems approach • Dying well in the bed you’re in • (Actually, not having a bad death – 56% of NHS hospital complaints relate to end of life care) • Hospices are called to contribute their expertise to this effort • But the emphasis is on generalists

  36. Whole systems approach - 1 • Identify people approaching the end of life • Raise community awareness of death and dying (an opportunity for hospices) • Start discussion about end of life care preferences • Not just those dying of cancer • Advance Care Planning • Note preferences and review over time

  37. Whole systems approach - 2 • Coordination of care • Locality-wide End of Life register (not restricted to cancer) to facilitate priority care • Care plans available to out of hours and emergency services • Palliative care crises do not just happen in hours • There must be specialist access 24/7, backed up by out of hours generic services

  38. Whole systems approach - 3 • Make high quality services available everywhere • Not just for cancer • Improve the skills of staff who provide generic palliative care • Regulatory and higher education bodies need to be involved

  39. Whole systems approach - 4 • Appropriate management of the last days of life • Wherever they occur • Not just for cancer – care based on need not illness • Involves 24/7 access to skilled nursing, medical and personal care • Support of carers • Before the patient’s death and into bereavement

  40. What is Missing? • Actually making it happen • Quality • What is practically measurable? • What is worth measuring? • An equitable funding mechanism • When government currently pays barely 50% of total Palliative Care costs • There is no extra money • The Australian AN-SNAP system is one approach • Paying by case-mix

  41. Challenges for Hospices • Contributing imaginatively to the healthcare community as a whole • Performing to a standard • A properly constituted multiprofessional team • 24h service availability • Demonstrating their outcomes • The non-malignancy agenda • Being efficient and providing value for money • Why do some hospices spend 90% of their income on their service and others only 50%?

  42. So what is St Christopher’s doing? • Extending our reach • Making generalists the centre of our education • Training care home staff and introducing end of life registers • New initiatives in public education • Finding ways of looking after more people within our budget and while maintaining quality • Expanding our clinics • Medical and nursing consultancies • Staying viable • Living within our means • Getting better at raising money • Looking for opportunities to merge • Containing costs • Increased bargaining power

  43. Education for Generalists • Making partnerships with the NHS • Advanced Nursing Practice for Palliative Care (Masters level) • Foundations Course in Palliative Care nursing • Innovative action learning programme for senior hospital nurses • End of Life Care for Social Services Care Managers • Educational project with Mental Health Services involved with Dementia Over 4,700 participants on 180 courses in 2010

  44. Education for Generalists • Enhancing skills in care homes • Advance Care Planning • The first syndicated training centre for the Gold Standards Framework • Over 120 care homes accredited to date • Deaths in care homes associated with the programme have increased by 20% • Care Homes have 3 times as many beds as the NHS but only 16% of deaths occur there

  45. Public EducationAiming to create healthier attitudes towards death and dying • Schools project • Work with the BRIT School (Performing Arts and Technology College) • Drama • Video • Open Fridays • Concerts

  46. The Schools Project • Children from Grade 5 upwards meet, work and talk with Hospice patients • 38 schools have taken part in the UK and internationally

  47. BRIT School students performing Hospice patients’ stories for the EAPC in Vienna

  48. Hospice as Performance Venue • Sunday lunch • Christmas day • Live music • Community choir

  49. Faces of St Christopher’s

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