| National Quality Forum Announces Release of Framework
and Preferred Practices for Palliative and Hospice Care
Quality |
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The National
Quality Forum (NQF) has released its National
Framework and Preferred Practices for Palliative and Hospice
Care Quality. The NQF recently identified palliative and
hospice care as national priority areas for healthcare quality
improvement.
Intended to be the first step in
developing a comprehensive quality measurement and reporting
system for palliative care and hospice services, the report
highlights consensus standards approved by NQF's more than 300
member organizations. As such, the voluntary consensus
standards have special legal standing. NQF reports are highly
influential.
The framework is based in part on the Clinical
Practice Guidelines for Quality Palliative Care,
issued in May 2004 by the National Consensus Project (NCP), a
consortium of palliative care and hospice organizations
including the Center to Advance Palliative Care.
The
executive summary of the report and list of preferred
practices are located on the NQF web site:
www.qualityforum.org.
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| Palliative Care Leadership CentersSM Train
500 Healthcare Institutions in Two-and-a-Half
Years |
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The Palliative Care Leadership CentersSM
(PCLC), an initiative launched by CAPC only three years ago,
have reached a milestone. They have trained over 500
healthcare institutions to start a palliative care program. Of
the institutions that have trained, 79% were hospitals, 20%
were hospices and 75% sent a finance person along with their
clinicians.
Six leading palliative care programs,
PCLCs provide on-site intensive training and mentoring to help
start and expand hospital palliative care programs in the U.S.
The curriculum focuses on eight essential financial and
operational aspects of building a palliative care program,
including hospital needs assessment; finance and business
planning; choosing organizational models; measuring clinical
and financial impact; ensuring and mananging growth; and
marketing.
"The large number of institutions that have
trained at a PCLC reflects the increasing recognition that
palliative care effectively addresses top healthcare concerns
such as quality improvement, the aging boom and the need to
manage the care of patients with advanced, chronic illness,"
says Dr. Diane E. Meier, Director of the Center to Advance
Palliative Care (CAPC).
The six PCLCs are:
- Fairview Health Services - Minneapolis, MN
- Medical College of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, WI
- Mount Carmel Health System - Columbus, OH
- Palliative Care Center of the Bluegrass - Lexington, KY
- University of California, San Francisco - San Francisco,
CA
- VCU Massey Cancer Center - Richmond, VA
To learn
more about PCLC and which program is right for you, click
here.
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| Successful New CAPC Website, getpalliativecare.org,
Provides Handout for Patients and their Families |
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The Center to Advance Palliative Care (CAPC) launched
its new website for patients and families, www.getpalliativecare.org
at the end of January 2007. In its first month,
getpalliativecare.org received over 3,500 unique visitors, as
well as a wealth of positive feedback from both the public and
professionals in the field.
Designed to provide
patients, family caregivers, doctors and policymakers with
clear, concise palliative care information, the site offers a
downloadable handout for patients and their families.
Clinicians can easily reproduce the handout in color or black
& white. It is available at www.getpalliativecare.org
from the homepage or the page for clinicians.
To
access this new palliative care resource for patients and
families, click
here.
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| Save-the-Date: CAPC Level I Seminar |
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Save-the-Date for CAPC's Fall Seminar:
A Level I Seminar
Building Palliative Care
Programs in Hospitals: Tools and Strategies for Success
November 1-3, 2007 San Francisco, California
This seminar is renowned as the field's basic primer
for planning and starting a palliative care program.
Who should attend?
Physicians, nurses,
administrators and others responsible for planning, exploring
or starting palliative care programs
What will you
learn?
- Making the financial case for palliative care
- Creating compelling business plans
- Developing effective marketing techniques
- Strategies for developing hospital/hospice partnerships
- And more!
For more information, email capcevents@mssm.edu or
call 212.201.2680.
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Rebroadcast of Open Mind Segments Featuring Dr.
Diane E. Meier, MD, FACP |
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Dr. Diane Meier, Director of the Center to Advance
Palliative Care, Director of the Hertzberg Palliative Care
Institute, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, and Professor of
Geriatrics and Internal Medicine, Mount Sinai School of
Medicine, was featured in two segments of the nationally
syndicated program, Open Mind, in November 2006.
These
segments will be rebroadcast on CUNY in the New York, NY area
on the following dates:
March 26 - segment 1 April
1 - segment 1 April 2 - segment 2 April 8 - segment
2
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| New Social Work Leadership Award |
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The
Social Work in Hospice and Palliative Care Network is
seeking nominations for those social workers in the areas of
research, education, practice and policy whose contributions
have reached far and wide in providing quality care to the
seriously ill, dying and bereaved.
This unique Project
on Death in America (PDIA) Social Work Leadership Award, made
possible by the Open Society Institute, includes a monetary
grant of $1,500, publishing opportunities, conference
registration and travel expenses to present the work.
Completed nomination packets must be received no later than
March 31, 2007.
For application information and to
learn more, please visit http://www.swhpn.org/award/
or contact Karen Johnson, Project Administrator, at (212)
851-2274.
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| Call for Survey Participation: HPNA/National Board for
Certification of Hospice and Palliative Nurses
(NBCHPN®) |
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Attention Hospice and Palliative
Administrators:
The National Board for
Certification of Hospice and Palliative Nurses
(NBCHPN®) is considering the development of a
certification program for administrators in hospice and
palliative care programs. The administrator/manager may have
direct clinical responsibilities, but those would be secondary
to the oversight responsibility.
To access the survey,
please click on the link below. If clicking on the link does
not take you to the survey, copy the entire link's text, paste
it into your internet browser's address field, and press
enter. Once you reach the survey's welcome page, type in the
password listed below. (Please note that the password is
case-sensitive.)
Link to the survey: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.asp?
u=286173031640
Password (case-sensitive):
NBCHPNrds2007
Please complete the survey by April
9, 2007.
It is estimated that the survey will take
about 30 minutes to complete. Your time and input are greatly
appreciated.
If you experience technical problems with
the survey, please contact Mike Clark at NBCHPN-RDS@goAMP.com.
If you would like to find out more about NBCHPN®, please
contact nbchpn@hpna.org.
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| Articles and News of Interest |
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Brink, S. Life on her own terms. Los Angeles Times;
February 2007.
To access the article, click
here.
Bingham, R. Improving communication in the
ICU about end-of-life care in the ICU reduces symptoms of
stress, anxiety, and depression in family members. NIH News;
February 2007.
To view this feature, click
here.
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| Next CAPC Audio Conference |
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Mark your calendars for this upcoming audio
conference with Dr. Diane E. Meier . . .
Quality
Measures 101 Wednesday, April 25, 2007 1:30 - 2:30
PM Eastern
Featured Speaker: Diane E.
Meier, MD, FACP Director, Hertzberg Palliative Care
Institute Mount Sinai School of Medicine Director,
Center to Advance Palliative Care
Learn
More and Register
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New! CAPC Level II Seminar for Active
Programs |
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Register Now Save Up
to $200
Strengthening
Your Palliative Care Program: A Level II Seminar for Growth
& Sustainability
June 21-23, 2007
Orlando, Florida
Whether your program has been up and running for a day
or for years, the new CAPC Level II Seminar will help you meet
the challenges of growth and make the leap to long-term
success. Highly interactive and personalized, this seminar
includes small group sessions to tackle real-world challenges,
"office hours" for one-on-one mentoring with expert faculty
and "lab time" to work on individual plans for your
program.
Get answers to your most pressing questions:
- How do you staff and plan for growth?
- How do you maximize billing?
- How will you attract ongoing financial support?
- What are the secrets to managing interdisciplinary team
dynamics?
- How do you trigger early referrals?
- What are the best outpatient models?
- How do you measure success?
Who should attend?
- Hospital and hospice physicians, nurses, social workers,
financial managers and administrators
- PCLC-trained team members
- CAPC Seminar I attendees
- Those seeking to restart a program
This seminar is approved for 16.5 AMA PRA Category I
Credit(s)TM. NYSNA and NASW credits are
pending.
To learn more, visit www.capc.org/orlando
Register
Now! |
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