Center to Advance Palliative Care

Partners



June 2006 eNews

capc logo @ 75% CAPC eNews
June 2006

In this issue...
  • Fall Seminar - Join Us in Chicago!
  • CAPC Feature: Hospitalists and Palliative Care: A Natural Alliance
  • Palliative Care News and Announcements
  • CAPC Training Opportunities

  • CAPC Feature: Hospitalists and Palliative Care: A Natural Alliance

    The Hospitalist Role
    More than almost any other medical specialty, hospitalists play an active role in improving the hospital environment as a whole by participating in quality initiatives, protocol development and other leadership activities. In many hospitals they are the de-facto providers of pain and symptom management for seriously ill patients, and they frequently interact with the ER and ICU, as well.

    This focus for hospital medicine suggests a natural affinity with palliative care. In fact, the professional organization for hospitalists, the Society for Hospital Medicine (SHM), recognizes palliative care as a core competency for hospitalists.1 SHM’s past president, Dr. Stephen Pantilat, director of the palliative care service at the University of California-San Francisco Medical Center, has been an important national advocate for the hospitalist’s role in advancing palliative care in the hospital.

    The Growing Field
    “Hospitalists are becoming predominant medical providers of hospital care,” Pantilat noted in a CAPC-sponsored national audio conference on May 18. Forty percent of U.S. hospitals now employ hospitalists to manage in-hospital patient care; many others are planning to do so. There are approximately 12,000 working hospitalists in the United States and the number could grow to 30,000 by 2010. “Hospitalists are providing care for many hospitalized patients who need palliative care,” including the half of all Americans who die in hospitals, he said.

    Hospitalists, in growing numbers, recognize the importance of palliative care to their work, but many feel they have not received adequate training in palliative care. Pantilat added that data from the Robert Wood Johnson-funded California Hospital Initiative in Palliative Services (CHIPS) project care suggest that the presence of hospitalists in a hospital is positively correlated with success in establishing a palliative care service, regardless of whether the hospitalists were actively involved in the program’s development.

    Hospitalists are uniquely qualified and positioned to lead efforts to improve access to palliative care in the hospital setting, with natural alignments in care goals and parallel competencies, Dr. Howard Epstein, a hospitalist at Regions Hospital in St. Paul, Minn., said in a presentation at the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization’s Clinical Team Conference in San Diego, Calif., in April.

    Epstein led a two-year planning process to launch the palliative care consulting service at Regions in 2005 and now participates with six other members of the hospitalist service in providing palliative care at the hospital. They also assume medical management of patients from an affiliated hospice program who are placed in the hospital for inpatient hospice care.

    Creating the Alliance
    How can palliative care advocates take advantage of this natural affinity? Epstein said they can start by recognizing the parallels between hospital medicine and palliative care, such as:

    • The need to document improved clinical, customer satisfaction and financial outcomes for the hospital in justifying each service’s existence;
    • The need to educate other physicians about the value and appropriate utilization of each service;
    • Their shared focus on helping patients transition to other levels of care including, when appropriate, referral to hospice; and
    • Recognition of the importance of the interdisciplinary team.

    Palliative care advocates are advised to learn the role hospitalists play in their institutions, identify and recruit potential palliative care champions from within the hospitalist service, and suggest roles that those champions can play in the development and provision of palliative care.

    The most basic role is for the hospitalist to recognize which hospitalized patients could benefit from palliative care consultations and refer them to the palliative care service. With education and convenient printed referral guides from the palliative care service, hospitalists could become major referrers to palliative care.

    Hospitalists who recognize a personal interest in palliative care can obtain additional training from CAPC, the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine or similar groups. The palliative care tools, concepts and perspectives they learn could then be incorporated into their daily practice. They can also participate in quality improvement initiatives such as writing protocols for ventilator weaning or pain management.

    If there is no palliative care service at the hospital, hospitalists can advocate for establishing one, participate in a planning or organizing committee, and then remain active on the palliative care interdisciplinary team or medical advisory committee. Some may take on direct clinical responsibilities as attending physicians on the palliative care service. An advanced step is for the hospitalist to become board-certified in hospice and palliative medicine and take a leadership role in palliative care for the hospital.

    However, experienced practitioners caution against the danger of trying to add palliative care responsibilities to existing full-time commitments as a hospitalist. “Zero FTEs is not viable in the long run” for a palliative care physician, Dr. Susan Block of Harvard Medical School noted in a recent article in The Hospitalist, a magazine published by SHM.2 Many hospital medicine services are busy and struggling to hire enough staff to keep up with demand, while a day working on the hospitalist service can be intense, Pantilat added.

    A more viable alternative might be for several members of a hospitalist group practice to incorporate palliative care rotations into their schedules, or to have a reduced hospitalist caseload on days when they are covering the palliative care service. Other creative scheduling approaches may need to be explored. Hospitalists could also provide medical back-up to a full-time nurse practitioner who carries most of the caseload for the palliative care service, or round with the palliative care service one hour a day.

    For hospitalists who find that they enjoy and are good at family meetings, medical goal planning or pain management, palliative care can offer opportunities for diversity and enhanced satisfaction in their jobs, for working with a high-functioning interdisciplinary team, and perhaps for an additional revenue stream of billing for medical consultations.

    Hospitalists can either lead, participate in or refer to palliative care, Pantilat concluded. The natural link between hospital medicine and palliative care can be a win-win proposition for the hospitalist, the hospital, the palliative care service and the patient and family.

    1See: www.hospitalmedicine.org/Content/NavigationMe nu/Education/CoreCurriculum/Core_Curriculum.htm.

    2Beresford L. Palliative care services offer new horizons for hospitalists. The Hospitalist, July/August 2005, p. 10-15.


    Palliative Care News and Announcements

    News You Can Use . . .

    AMA Supports Palliative Medicine as a Medical Subspecialty
    At the 2006 Annual Meeting of the American Medical Association (AMA) last week, the House of Delegates approved a resolution to establish a Specialty Section Council on Pain and Palliative Medicine. In addition, a report adopted by the House of Delegates calls for the AMA to recognize the importance of providing interdisciplinary palliative care for patients with disabling chronic or life-limiting illness to prevent and relieve suffering and to support the best possible quality of life for these patients and their families.

    More details will be provided as the final reports of the actions of the House of Delegates are released.

    Information excerpted from the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine (AAHPM) e-News.

    National Quality Forum Announces Framework for Palliative Care
    In a move that brings national recognition to the wide-reaching concern for quality of care for patients nearing the end of life, the National Quality Forum has announced the endorsement of a National Framework and Preferred Practices for Palliative and Hospice Care Quality.

    The framework is based in part on the Clinical Practice Guidelines for Quality Palliative Care, issued in May 2004 by the National Consensus Project, a consortium of palliative care and hospice organizations including the Center to Advance Palliative Care.

    Access the press release from the National Quality Forum here. Read the NCP press release here.

    New Study Shows Need for Better Management of Chronic Illness
    The latest edition of the Dartmouth Atlas, released in May, showed that care of chronically ill patients varies widely among academic medical centers. Wide variation was seen in the intensity of care delivered to chronically ill patients in the six months preceding death; some sites were five times more likely than others to utilize expensive resources such as acute care hospitalization and ICU admission.

    To access the full study, press release, and interactive data tools from the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, please visit www.dartmouthatlas.org. To read CAPC’s full press release, please visit the CAPC Web site.

    ASCO and ESMO Release Consensus Statement
    The American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) and the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO), two of the world’s leading oncology societies, recently released a joint Consensus Statement on Quality Cancer Care for patients across the globe. Consensus statement highlights of quality cancer care system goals include a multidisciplinary care team staffed with palliative care specialists, and patients access to management, supportive and palliative care.

    For more information and to read statement highlights, click here.

    Integrating Palliative Care for Liver Transplant Candidates
    "Too Well for Transplant, Too Sick for Life"
    The Journal of the American Medical Association, May 10, 2006, Vol. 295 No. 18,
    Authors: Anne M. Larson, MD; J. Randall Curtis, MD, MPH

    To access the abstract, click here.

    To access the full article, click here.
    Note: Subscribed membership is required to view full article.

    Annoucements . . .

    Journal of Hospital Medicine Request: Patient/Family Stories
    The Journal of Hospital Medicine is looking for patient/family stories related to hospital palliative care to feature in its "View from the Hospital Bed and Room" section. To comprehend fully the hospital experience of patients and their families, hospitalists can benefit from hearing their stories. Without this appreciation, hospitalists cannot empathetically deliver the care patients deserve.

    The editors of JHM hope to bring the patient’s perspective to the forefront of hospital medicine care. The next time you recognize that a patient or family member has a potent story to tell (good or bad), encourage them to send it to: Robin Tricoles, Managing Editor, at rtricol@emory.edu or JHMEditor@hospitalmedicine.org.

    Once a patient/family has been identified by their physician or other health care provider, then JHM will arrange an interview with the patient/family for the feature.

    Journal of Palliative Medicine Indexing
    The Journal of Palliative Medicine, the official Journal of the Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine has been accepted for indexing in Current Contents/Clinical Medicine. Additionally, it is indexed in MEDLINE, EMBASE and Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature. This further attests to the high quality of this journal. Also, JPM is now offering banners on the Palliative Medicine, Liebert-on-line journal page.

    To learn more about advertising opportunities, visit www.liebertonline.com/loi/jpm.


    CAPC Training Opportunities

    Fast-Track Your Palliative Care Program with PCLC Training!
    Take the next step in your palliative care program development and register to attend a Palliative Care Leadership Training (PCLC). PCLC offers two days of intensive, on-site training and a full year of mentoring in all operational aspects of building a hospital palliative care program.

    To learn more or to register at any of the six PCLCs, go to www.capc.org/pclc.

    NEW PCLC Curriculum!
    Building Academic Palliative Care
    Designed specifically for academic medical centers Building Academic Palliative Carewas developed by three academic PCLCs firmly established in palliative care research, education and clinical service – Medical College of Wisconsin, University of California, San Francisco and Virginia Commonwealth University.

    Register now!

    Questions? Contact Matthew Henry, PCLC Program Coordinator, (212) 201-2683 or matthew.henry@mssm.edu.

    NEXT CAPC Audio Conference —
    Reaching Out to Your Referring Physicians
    Tuesday, July 11, 2006
    1:30 - 2:30 PM Eastern
    10:30 - 11:30 AM Pacific

    Featured Speaker:
    David E. Weissman, MD,
    Professor & Director of Palliative Care
    Principal Investigator, Palliative Care Leadership Center
    Medical College of Wisconsin/Froedtert Hospital

    Register now!


    Fall Seminar - Join Us in Chicago!

    Register now!

    Building Palliative Care Programs in Hospitals: Tools and Strategies for Success

    Take Advantage of Early Bird Rates!

    November 2-4, 2006
    Intercontinental Chicago
    Chicago, Illinois

    Learn how the hospital of the future can meet the needs of its most complex patients.

    Join us for our upcoming Fall Seminar - a unique, comprehensive overview of the financial and operational essentials of building a successful palliative care program.

    You will learn:

    • How to create compelling business and financial plans
    • How to conduct needs assessments
    • Tools to measure quality, cost and satisfaction
    • Effective marketing techniques
    • Strategies for funding programs
    • How to build hospital-hospice partnerships

    Who should attend?
    Physicians, nurses, administrators and others responsible for the planning and implementation of your palliative care program. Institutional teams are encouraged to attend.

    Mount Sinai School of Medicine designates this educational activity for a maximum of 15.75 AMA PRA Category 1 CreditsTM

    Nurse and social work credits are pending for this program.

    The Seminar Registration Form and Seminar Brochure are now available on the CAPC website at www.capc.org.

    Register now!

    For additional information, please call the CAPC Events line at 212-201-2680 or email CAPC at capcevents@mssm.edu.

    Quick Links...

    Register for Fall Seminar

    Sign Up to Train at a PCLC

    Sign Up for Building Academic Palliative Care

    Register for Audio Conferences

    The Guide

    Job Postings

    Visit www.capc.org



    Join our mailing list!
    email: capc@mssm.edu
    phone: 212.201.2670