170 likes | 180 Views
This resource highlights the unmet needs for palliative care in long-term care facilities and provides strategies for identifying appropriate patients and implementing effective care. Learn how palliative care can reduce hospitalizations and improve pain management in nursing home settings.
E N D
National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization’sPalliative Care Resource SeriesPalliative Indicators in Long Term CareWritten by: Brian W. Jones, DHSc, CHPCA
Current Situation • Approximately 1.7 million Americans reside in long term care facilities. • Annually, 25% of all deaths occur in a nursing home setting. • Many nursing home patients are totally dependent or need extensive help for their activities of daily living. • Up to 80% of nursing home patients could benefit from palliative care.
Unmet Needs • Daily episodes of pain ineffectively managed. • Pain is prevalent in 49% to 83% of patients. • Pain medication often prescribed “as needed” and not given routinely. • Pain is difficult to assess in patients who often have cognitive impairments and multiple comorbidities.
Unmet Needs • High staff turnover can lead to inadequate and inconsistent education on pain assessment/management. • Scant attention is often given to advance care planning and decision making at end of life. • this can lead to unnecessary treatments and prolonged dying for nursing home patients.
Palliative Care Can Help • Hospice, which is downstream palliative care, when initiated in nursing homes can effectively reduce hospitalizations even for non-hospice patients. • For every 10% increase in hospice care in nursing homes there is a reduced hospitalization risk in 5.1% of non-hospice patients and 4.8% of hospice`patients.
Palliative Care Can Help Reduced hospitalizations of nursing home patients is an indication that more patients are being managed effectively (symptoms, pain, etc.) in their existing setting.
Identifying Appropriate Patients • Nursing homes have lagged behind other health care entities in transitioning to electronic medical records (EMR). • EMRs assist in providing algorithms which may indicate the need for palliative care. • Paper documentation currently poses a challenge in identifying appropriate patients for palliative care.
Identifying Appropriate Patients:Palliative Performance Scale • PPS is a well-known tool in hospice to help ensure eligibility for admission and continued service. • One nursing home utilized the PPS in conjunction with their MDS assessment and patients who scored 30% or less automatically received a goals of care discussion between staff, patient, and family.
Identifying Appropriate Patients:Four-Fold Combination • “Would I be surprised if this patient does not live beyond a year’s time frame?” • Did this patient, if hospitalized, receive a palliative inpatient consultation? • Has this patient had two or more hospitalizations within the last 6 months? • Are there any documented advance directives or goals of care discussions?
Identifying Appropriate Patients:RAI-PC • The Resident Assessment Instrument for Palliative Care (RAI-PC) is a standardized comprehensive tool to help identify patients who would benefit from palliative care.
Potential Strategies • Meet with the MDS coordinator, DON, and/or administrator to identify gaps, needs and ways to collaborate. • Share peer reviewed literature on palliative care in nursing homes. • Examine hospital readmission patterns among nursing home patients • Facility will need to understand ‘what’s in it for them?’
Potential Strategies • Design a nursing home palliative care team • Examine scope, quality, metrics, volume forecasting, financials and return on investment. • Pilot in a small facility that is part of a larger chain or two units in a larger nursing home. • Data share.
Potential Strategies • Decide which indicators will be used in collaboration. • Assess results monthly, quarterly, to ensure goals are being met. • Expand services.
Conclusion The ultimate goal is to move palliative care further upstream in nursing homes to provide effective pain and symptom management and overall holistic care for patients.