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Improving the Care of the Dying Across the Waikato DHB Region

Improving the Care of the Dying Across the Waikato DHB Region. Theresa Mackenzie NZRGON, PG Dip (Pall Care) LCP Project Coordinator Specialist Palliative Care Nurse Health Waikato 24 August, 2007.

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Improving the Care of the Dying Across the Waikato DHB Region

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  1. Improving the Care of the Dying Across the Waikato DHB Region Theresa Mackenzie NZRGON, PG Dip (Pall Care) LCP Project Coordinator Specialist Palliative Care Nurse Health Waikato 24 August, 2007.

  2. The LCP is an integrated care pathway first developed by palliative care physician Dr. John Ellershaw (UK) in 1997 to transfer the hospice model of care into other care settings, focusing on the last few days of life. • It is a multi-professional document which empowers generalist palliative care health professionals to provide evidence-based end-of-life care. • The outcomes of care are measurable & facilitate audit with the opportunity to contribute to benchmarking home-based end-of-life care both nationally & internationally.

  3. Local & national strategies/documents underpinning the need to provide equitable access to quality care for all dying patients and their families/whanau. • NZ Palliative Care Strategy (2001) • NZ Cancer Control Strategy (2003) • NZ Cancer Control Strategy Action Plan 2005-2010 (2005) • Waikato DHB Palliative Care Strategic Project Steering Group Report (2005) • Waikato DHB Palliative Care Strategy Plan 2005-2010 (2005) • Waikato DHB District Annual Plan (2005)

  4. “Hospitals mainly provide services to dying people as a component of other services (for example acute care or general care). This is generally not tailored for dying people” NZ Palliative Care Strategy, 2001, p. 35 “To develop a more responsive system that can support a person’s choice to die at home. Research shows that 50-70% of people would prefer to have the choice of home care. At present only 31% of people with cancer die at home” NZ Palliative Care Strategy, 2001, p.6.

  5. Waikato DHB Palliative Care Strategy Plan 2005-2010 • “It is recommended that the Liverpool End-of-Life pathway for the dying patient be implemented across the Waikato DHB settings i.e. hospice inpatient beds, rest homes, and continuing care facilities, home based care and acute inpatient setting.” • “This initiative is resource intensive, requiring ongoing education and attention to minimize barriers to implementation.” (Hewitt, 2005, p. 38).

  6. Waikato’s LCP Pilot Project • Joint initiative of Waikato Palliative Care Operations Network (est. 2005) & HSPCT • Registered with the LCP Central Lead Team in the UK as an international collaborating centre • Access to pathways, audits, international implementation plan, advice & support - at no cost • 3 x hospital wards = LCP pilot October 2006

  7. A snapshot of Waikato hospital’s pre- and post-LCP implementation audits…

  8. Comfort measures: discontinued inappropriate interventions in the last 48hrs of life TPR turns SCP Blood tests A/B’s IVF NFR Cardiac defibs (before LCP implemented)

  9. Comfort measures: discontinued inappropriate interventions in the last 48hrs of life. Blood tests Cardiac defibs TPR turns SCP A/B’s IVF NFR (after LCP implemented)

  10. Assessment of documentation of ongoing care in the last 48hrs of life: before LCP implemented

  11. Assessment of documentation of ongoing care in the last 48hrs of life: after LCP implemented

  12. Benefits of the LCP • Improves documentation • Standardises practice • For patients with malignant and non-malignant disease • Excellent education tool – medical, nursing, allied health, under- & post graduate students • Guides pharmacological symptom management in a way that neither hastens or postpones death • Anticipatory prescribing prevents delays in the management of pain, agitation, RTS, & dyspnoea. - averts “crisis” admissions to hospital for dying patients with manageable symptoms in their last days or hours of life - potentially reduces the number of ‘call-outs’ for after-hours staff in hospitals & GP’s in the community to prescribe for the dying pt

  13. continued.. • Increases confidence & knowledge of staff • Strengthens the specialist-generalist link & facilitates access to specialist advice for complex symptom management (hospital, rest home, hospice, community) • Measurable outcomes / Audit • Contribution to the benchmarking of care of he dying nationally & internationally

  14. Outcomes • Pre- & post-implementation audits showed a marked improvement in the documentation of care • Additional resources – LCP Community Liaison nurse & an 8 month nursing secondment to the HSPCT • Doctors writing ‘start on Liverpool Care Pathway’ in the pt’s clinical notes • Consultants in pilot wards unanimously agreed to continue use • Doctors wanting to use the LCP for their ’outliers’ • H/S asking for the LCP when rotating wards • LCP’s being used without PCT knowledge • Dying pt’s staying under the care of their team

  15. continued.. • Fewer referrals to SPCT for advice re: uncomplicated EoL symptom management • LCP ‘language’ becoming embedded in nursing practice Nurses not ‘avoiding’ caring for dying patients • Monthly LCP Network Nurse Group • Resources endorsed by Health & Disability Commissioner • ‘Death, Dying and the LCP’ education to Yr 2 nurses at WINTEC

  16. LCP Implementation in the Waikato…2 years on • 6 wards in Waikato hospital ≈ 50% of total no. of hospital deaths • 105 LCP’s in 11mths since the pilot • 9 wards by end of Oct ’07 • Time on LCP: 1 hour to 21 days • 7 pts stopped LCP – 6 pts discharged home/rest home & died 2-4 days later & 1 died 21days later in rest home • GP’s in Cambridge & Ngaruawahia (Pinnacle) in collaboration with Hospice Waikato (a ‘first’ in NZ) = ‘Community LCP’ for home-based care of the dying • 3 x Rest Homes in Cambridge = base audit completed x1 + 3 LCP’s • Thames Hospital (54-bed rural hospital) = base audit completed; education September ‘07

  17. Waikato End of Life Pathway Implementation Plan 2006-2010 LCP Facilitators; GP’s; Consulting Team; LCP Network Nurses; Hospice Community Nurses; District Nurses; Specialist Palliative Care Team Rest homes / Rural hospitals ---------------------- Care at home --------------------------------- Base hospital -------------------------------------------- LCP education / Project management / End-of-life care support and advice ------------------------------------------------------------------ ORGANISATIONAL SUPPORT ----------------------------------------------------------------------- New Zealand Palliative Care Strategy (2001) New Zealand Cancer Control Strategy Action Plan (2005-2010) LCP Facilitators; GP’s; District Nurses; Hospice Community Nurses; Specialist Palliative Care Team LCP Facilitators; Consulting Team; LCP Network Nurses; Specialist Palliative Care Team LCP Facilitators; Specialist Palliative Care Team Waikato Palliative Care Strategy; Waikato Palliative Care Operations Network GOAL:Equitable access to quality evidence-based end-of-life care

  18. References • Ellershaw, J.E., Smith, C., Overill, S., Walker, S.E., & Aldridge, J. (2001). Care of the dying: setting the standards for symptom control in the last 48 hours of life. Journal of pain and symptom management, 21(1); pp. 12-17. • Ellershaw, J.E. (2002). Clinical pathways for care of the dying - an innovation to disseminate clinical excellence. Journal of palliative medicine, 5(4); pp. 617-623. • Ellershaw J.E., & Ward, C. (2003). Care of the dying patient: the last hours or days of life. BMJ, 326; pp. 30-34. • Ellershaw, J.E., & Wilkinson, S. (2003). Care of the dying: a pathway to excellence. Oxford: Oxford University Press. • Jack, B., Gambles, M., Murphy, D., & Ellershaw, J.E. (2003). Nurses’ perceptions of the Liverpool care pathway for the dying patient in the acute hospital setting. International journal of palliative nursing, 9(9); pp. 375-381. • Kitson, a., Harvey, G., & McCormack, B. 1998. Enabling the implementation of evidence based practice: a conceptual framework. Quality in health care, Sep 7(3); pp. 149-158. • Minister of Health. (2005-2010). New Zealand Cancer Control Strategy Action Plan. Wellington: Minister of Health. • Minister of Health. (2001). New Zealand Palliative Care Strategy. Wellington: Minister of Health. • Waikato District Health Board. (2005). Palliative care strategy plan 2005-2010. Author.

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