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Practicalities of Palliative Care. Dr Sarah Holmes Consultant in Palliative Medicine. Identifying Patients. Three triggers for Supportive/ Palliative Care. 1. The surprise question: ‘Would you be surprised if this patient were to die in the next 6-12 months?’ 2. Choice:
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Practicalities of Palliative Care Dr Sarah Holmes Consultant in Palliative Medicine
Three triggers for Supportive/ Palliative Care 1. The surprise question: ‘Would you be surprised if this patient were to die in the next 6-12 months?’ 2. Choice: The patient with advanced disease makes a choice for comfort care only eg refusing renal transplant 3. Clinical indicators: Specific to each of the three main end of life groups - cancer, organ failure, elderly frail/dementia
Boyd K, Murray SA. Recognising and managing key transitions in end of life care. BMJ 2010; 341:649-651
Transition 1: Would my patient benefit from supportive and palliative care? • Transition 2: Is my patient reaching the last days of life?
Supportive and Palliative Care Indicators tool • Ask • Does this patient have an advanced long term condition, a new diagnosis of a progressive life limiting illness, or both? • Would you be surprised if this patient died in the next 6-12 months?
Supportive and Palliative Care Indicators Tool (2) Look for one or more general clinical indicators • Performance status poor or deteriorating • Progressive weight loss (>10%) over past 6 months • 2 or more unplanned admissions in last 6 months • Patient is in a nursing /care home, or needs more care at home
Supportive and Palliative Care Indicators Tool (3) Now look for two or more disease related clinical indicators
Heart disease • NYHA Class IV, severe valve disease or extensive CAD • Breathless/chest pain at rest or on minimal exertion • Persistent symptoms despite optimum tolerated therapy • Renal impairment (eGFR,30ml/min) • Systolic BP<100 or pulse>100 • Cardiac cachexia • 2 or more acute episodes needing iv treatment in past 6 months
Renal disease • Stage 5 CKD (eGFR<15ml/min) • Conservative renal management due to multi-morbidity • Deteriorating on RRT • Not starting dialysis following failure of a renal transplant • New life limiting condition or renal failure as a complication of another condition or treatment
Respiratory disease • Severe airways obstruction (FEV<30%) or restrictive deficit (VC<60%, transfer factor<40%) • LTOT • Breathless at rest or on minimal exertion between exacerbations • Persistent severe symptoms despite optimal therapy • Symptomatic heart failure • BMI<21 • More emergency admissions for infective exacerbations and/or respiratory failure
Liver disease • Advanced cirrhosis with one or more complications • Serum albumin < 25 and prothrombin time raised or INR prolonged • Hepatocellular carcinoma
Cancer • Performance status deteriorating due to metastatic cancer and/or comorbidities • Persistent symptoms despite optimal palliative oncology treatment • Too frail for oncology treatment
Neurological disease • Progressive deterioration in physical and/or cognitive function despite optimal therapy • Symptoms that are complex an difficult to control • Speech problems; increasing difficulty communicating; progressive dysphagia • Recurrent aspiration pneumonia; breathless or respiratory failure
Dementia • Unable to dress, walk or eat without assistance • Unable to communicate meaningfully • Increasing eating problems; receiving pureed/soft diet or supplements or tube feeding • Recurrent febrile episodes or infections; aspiration pneumonia • Urinary or faecal incontinence
Clinical indicators for terminal care Q1. Could this patient be in the last days of life? • Confined to bed/chair or unable to self care • Difficulty taking oral fluids or not tolerating artificial feeding/hydration • No longer able to take oral medication • Increasingly drowsy
Clinical indicators for terminal care • Q2. Was this patient’s condition expected to deteriorate in this way? • Q3. Is further life-prolonging treatment inappropriate? • Q4. Have potentially reversible causes of deterioration been excluded?
Gold Standards Framework • Framework to improve coordination and delivery of palliative care in the community • Recommended: • NICE Guidance 2004 • End of Life Care Strategy 2008
Goals of GSF Patients are enabled to have a ‘good death’ 1) Symptoms controlled 2) Preferred place of care 3) Fewer crises 4) Carers feel supported, involved, satisfied 5) Staff confidence, teamwork and communication improve
Gold Standards Framework C1 Communication: Register – not just a list – “surprise question”, PHCT discussion, traffic light system, Advanced Care Planning C2 Co-ordination: Identified GSF coordinator eg DN, named GP, patients know they are “Gold”, PHCT discussion C3 Control of symptoms: Education, assessment tools, anticipating problems, links with Specialists
C4 Continuity: OOH Handover Form, resuscitation status C5 Continued learning: Opportunities PHCT, Critical Events Review, preferred vs actual place of death C6 Carer support: National Carer’s Strategy, Risk assessment for bereavement support, Advanced Care Planning C7 Care in the dying phase: LCP, Gold Boxes, Priority Patient status
Current Problems with CPR Both professionals and the public understanding of CPR and its success rate remains misunderstood Some patients are having CPR attempted inappropriately and as a result death can be undignified and traumatic Dying patients are being transferred back to hospital when their preferred place of death is home Patients wishes and preferences are not always clarified and respected (advance decisions to refuse treatment) Good communication and consistent documentation is poor All care settings including ambulance service have their own documentation to record DNACPR
Yorkshire & Humber SHA Yorkshire and Humber SHA are working together with a team of clinicians and providers to agree a regionally co-ordinated approach to improve patient experience, dignity and quality of care in patients for whom CPR is inappropriate or to uphold an advance decision To be rolled out across Yorkshire & Humber in a phased approach over next 6-12 months. B & A launch September 20th 2010
Policy objectives Avoid inappropriate CPR attempts and allow natural death Encourage and facilitate good communication with patients and relevant others Clarify that patients and relevant others will not be asked to decide about CPR when clinicians are as sure as they can be that CPR would not be successful and therefore is not a treatment option Ensure that a DNACPR decision is communicated to all relevant healthcare professionals so that the transfer of patients between services does not compromise dignity, quality of care or patient choice
Documentation ONE single form to record DNACPR decisions which can be transferred across all care settings (home, hospital, hospice, care home including ambulance) If being transferred from hospital to another care setting: original form will follow patient copy of the form MUST be taken and filed in medical notes (for audit purposes) Patients may be admitted to hospital with a completed form Decision will be recorded by GP on the new End of Life Register within SystmOne (electronic patient record) as well completed form remaining with patient
Referral criteria • The patient has active, progressive and usually advanced disease for which the prognosis is limited (although it can be several years) and the focus of care is quality of life
Referral criteria • AND • The patient has one or more of the following needs which are unmet: • Uncontrolled or complicated symptoms • Specialised nursing/therapy requirements • Complex psychological/emotional issues • Complex social/family issues • Difficult decision making about future care
Role of the Macmillan Nurse • See criteria for referral to Specialist Palliative Care services – needs which cannot be met by existing care providers • Symptom control • Psychosocial concerns • Spiritual concerns • Patient assessed either at home or as an outpatient if preferred (2 working days urgent, 5 non-urgent). • Interventions may include: • Advice on symptom management, may prescribe • Psychosocial support/ counselling • Referral to other services (lymphoedema, benefits advice, psychology, Fast Track, Hospice at Home, Marie Curie hospice or day therapy) • Contact may be brief or ongoing depending on complexity
Hospice services • Outpatients • Day therapy • COPD group • Heart failure group • Art group • Inpatients • Complementary therapy • Bereavement
Useful Resources • Treatment and care towards the end of life: good practice in decision-making, GMC 2010 • www.goldstandardsframework.nhs.uk • www.endoflifecareforadults.nhs.uk