Program Development for Safety Net Institutions Catherine Deamant, MD Director, Palliative Care Services Cook County Health and Hospitals System Coleman.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Lori Embleton, Program Director WRHA Palliative Care Program
Advertisements

Advanced Illness Management Sutter Health Lois Cross RN BSN ACM Sutter Health
Role of the Pharmacist in Collaborative Care for Mental Health and Addiction Treatment in Medically Underserved Appalachia Sarah T. Melton, PharmD,BCPP,CGP.
Five Priorities for care of the dying person
1240 College View Drive, Riverton, WY Phone A non-profit organization 5 I MPORTANT H OSPICE F ACTS 1.Hospice is NOT only for the last.
Tad P. Fisher Executive Vice President Florida Academy of Family Physicians Patient Centered Medical Home A Medicaid Managed Care Alternative.
Socioeconomic concerns around End-of-Life Care Mary Ellen McGreevey Director of Social Services.
The Evercare Model: Using Nurse Practitioners to Achieve Positive Outcomes Pat Kappas-Larson, MPH APRN-BC Professional Relations/Development April 24,
Inpatient Palliative Care: What is it and Why it’s Important Lyra Sihra MD Associate Medical Director Gentiva Hospice.
2.11 Conduct Medication Management University Medical Center Health System Lubbock, TX Jason Mills, PharmD, RPh Assistant Director of Pharmacy.
Readmission and Chronic illness that could benefit from end of life discussions.
Insert your organization’s logo here. Understanding Hospice, Palliative Care and End-of-life Issues This presentation is intended as a template. Modify.
Understanding Hospice, Palliative Care and End-of-life Issues  This presentation is intended as a template  Modify and/or delete slides as appropriate.
PALLIATIVE CARE: ANY STAGE, ANY AGE WHAT PROVIDERS NEED TO KNOW May 2013.
August 2012 If you have an Emergency Department, you are in the Behavioral Health Business…..
Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing in Acute Care Settings.
Palliative Care Cost : A look at the evidence
Understanding Hospice, Palliative Care and End-of-life Issues
The Big Puzzle Evolving the Continuum of Care. Agenda Goal Pre Acute Care Intra Hospital Care Post Hospital Care Grading the Value of Post Acute Providers.
Update on Palliative Care and POLST (Practitioner Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment) Amy Frieman, MD Medical Director, Palliative Care Services Meridian.
Asthma: Shared Medical Appointments
The Power of Clinical Strategies to Reduce Costs: The Unexploited Opportunity for States as Healthcare Purchasers Bruce Amundson, MD President Community.
Palliative Care Consultation Team An Introduction Basics of Pain Management
Palliative Care “101“. Definition Palliative Care Specialized medical care for people with serious illnesses. It is focused on providing patients with.
SC Coalition for the Care of the Seriously Ill ( SC CSI) August 27, 2011 SCMA Board Retreat John C. Ropp, III, MD, Chairman, SC CSI.
Long-Term Care: Managing Across the Continuum (Second Edition)
The Business Case for Bidirectional Integrated Care: Mental Health and Substance Use Services in Primary Care Settings and Primary Care Services in Specialty.
Palliative Care Integration in the ICU Colleen Tallen M.D. September 26, 2013.
Health Care Reform Through the Cancer Lens State and Private Sector Reforms for Hispanic Healthcare Edward E. Partridge, MD National Board President American.
Perspectives on the Age Wave: Key Issues, Solutions, and Opportunities Robyn Golden, LCSW Director of Older Adult Programs Rush University Medical Center.
Targeting Resource Use Effectively (TRUE) Goal:Optimize hospice use –Increase appropriate referrals to hospice –Increase the length of stay of hospice.
SCHEN SCC-CSI MUSC Walter Limehouse MD MA MUSC Emergency Medicine.
Understanding Hospice, Palliative Care and End-of-life Issues Richard E. Freeman MD.
Unit 1a: Health Care Quality and HIT Introduction to QI and HIT This material was developed by Johns Hopkins University, funded by the Department of Health.
PALLIATIVE CARE WORKING AS A TEAM TO IMPROVE YOUR QUALITY OF LIFE May 2013.
Cultivating Meaningful Conversations to Guide Care: An Initiative to Encourage End-Of-Life- Care Planning for People with Dementia Elizabeth Balsam Hart,
1 AHRQ Annual Conference Progress of a Learning Network: Working to Reduce Disparities by Improving Access to Care Bethesda, Maryland September 14, 2009.
Hospice Through a ‘[insert community]’ Lens: Brief Basics, Gaps, and Opportunities Barry K. Baines, MD.
Healthcare and Hospice Unit 8 Seminar. Human Services in Hospitals Psychosocial assessments Post discharge follow up Providing information and referrals.
Communicating Effectively with the C-Suite Kenneth Maddock, BSEET Vice President of Clinical Engineering and Telecomm Services, Baylor Health Care System.
Home Based Palliative Care Richard D. Brumley, MD Gretchen Phillips, MSW Kaiser Permanente Downey, CA Practice Change Fellows January 24, 2008.
Health Care Reform Primary Care and Behavioral Health Integration John O’Brien Senior Advisor on Health Financing SAMHSA.
Introduction to Case Management. Why Case Management ?  The context of care is changing; we now have an ageing population and an increase in chronic.
The Christ Hospital Inpatient Palliative Care Consult Service Easing the Burden of Serious Illness.
Payment and Delivery Reform Steve Arner Senior Vice President / Chief Operating Officer June 6, 2013.
Evolution & Maturation of the Practice of Hospice and Palliative Medicine Charles F. von Gunten, MD, PhD May 16, 2013 Vice President, Medical Affairs Hospice.
June 9, 2008 Making Mortality Measurement More Meaningful Incorporating Advanced Directives and Palliative Care Designations Eugene A. Kroch, Ph.D. Mark.
Will This Admission Help? Leonard Hock, D.O., CMD Covenant Hospice.
Communications during Life Limiting Illness & POLST in SC Walter Limehouse, MD, MA MUSC Ethics Comte.
Iowa Health System Leadership Symposium Palliative Care and Hospice The “Final” Frontier.
Understanding Hospice and Palliative Care This presentation is intended as a template. Modify and/or delete slides as appropriate for your organization.
Racial Disparities in Primary Care and Utilization of Health Services at the End-of-Life Andrea Kronman, MD Boston University School of Medicine.
Provide the right care for each patient at the right time in the right care setting Transitions in Care: Caring for our Patients Connecting our Partners.
Healthcare and Hospice Unit 8 Dawn Burgess, Ed.D.
Transition to Reform in Wisconsin Donna McDowell, Director Bureau of Aging & Disability Resources Department of Health Services D. McDowell1.
Hospice Care in the Aging Population Mary Rossio Principals of Health Behavior MPH 515 Danielle Hartigan February 20, 2015.
M. Kay M. Judge, EdD, RN Marjorie J. Wells, PhD, ARNP.
Basic Nursing: Foundations of Skills & Concepts Chapter 5
Inpatient Palliative Care A hospital service at SOMC where patients can benefit from palliative care consultative services during their hospitalization.
Outpatient Center. West Baltimore Chronic Disease Profile and Acute Care Utilization.
Overview of Palliative Care Suzann Bonzo, MD. The Greatest Barrier  The greatest barrier to end of life care is Clinicians  Due to the lack of confidence.
When Location Doesn’t Matter: When the Quality of Care is at Stake Johanna Warren MD, Jessica Flynn MD, and Scott Fields MD MHA Oregon Health & Sciences.
Who? What? When? Where? Why? Cecilia L. May, MD October 9, 2015.
Heart Failure Services at STH: How it works and how End of Life issues are addressed Dr Soon H Song Consultant Diabetologist Acute Medicine Lead for STH.
A Perspective on Family Medicine and End-of-Life and Palliative Care Peter Selwyn, M.D., M.P.H. Professor and Chairman Department of Family & Social Medicine.
Lessons from Uganda: Chronic Disease and Palliative Care in a Resource Limited Setting Kuang-Ning Huang, MD UVM Family Medicine Residency PGY3.
Palliative Care at UCH Pager:
John A Stoukides MD ScD Regional Chief Medical Officer CharterCare Provider Group RI Chief, Division of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine Roger Williams.
Cindy Hatton President & CEO Susan Levitt V.P. Clinical Services/COO
Payment Reform to Transform Advanced Illness Care
Presentation transcript:

Program Development for Safety Net Institutions Catherine Deamant, MD Director, Palliative Care Services Cook County Health and Hospitals System Coleman Fellowship Workshop September 7, 2013 We Bring HealthCARE to Your Community

Definition of Safety Net Institution Provides significant level of care to low-income, uninsured, and vulnerable populations. – Not dependent upon public vs. non-profit – Core safety net providers: mission to have “open door” to all regardless of ability to pay (high uninsured, Medicaid, vulnerable) High risk for fragmented care, inadequate community support & high symptom burden

Palliative Care in Safety Net Setting Goals of palliative care are same as all hospitals: – Provide high quality interdisciplinary care to improve quality of life for patients with serious illness throughout the continuum of care with respect and dignity. Justifications for palliative care are same for all hospitals: – Cost savings – Patient/family satisfaction – Quality metrics

Palliative Care in Safety Net Setting Know who you serve Demonstrate credibility Identify unique opportunities

Know who you serve: Patients & Families Lack of access to care means late diagnosis – 40% diagnosed with advanced illness within 3 months of hospitalization (20% on the index admission) Culturally diverse: – 30% Limited English proficiency 60% uninsured at time of admission – Fear of financial burden 8% advanced liver disease (national-2%) – Limited social support Young population – Average age-58 years

Demonstrate credibility with patients Address the barriers to quality end of life care through palliative care interventions – Develop relationship with interpreter services – Educate on advance directive as form of empowerment – Address misconceptions of hospice care – Respect wishes for site of death-home is not always a goal Trust: – PC consult for hospice referral – Build relationship; avoid abandonment Facilitate goal of return to home country – Must be patient’s goal, not institution’s

Impact on Disparities: End of Life Decisions Outcome VariableOverallPCCPrimary team Completed a Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care 126/141 (89%) 118 (94%) 8 (6%) DNR Status153/173 (88%) 101 (66%) 52 (34%) Hospice Enrollment134/147 (91%) 37% died inpatient hospice 173 African-American patients with Cancer seen by PC

Know who you serve: Providers Emotionally challenging to care for very young patients who are dying with limited resources – Support primary team – Strategies to reduce burnout (especially for PC team) Majority of consultations for goals of care Develop hospital-hospice relationship who will share the mission (unless hospital has own hospice) – Be comprehensive in your PC role (address issues of prognosis and resuscitation before referral) – Serve as attending physician – Provide medications for transfer home

Hospital Deaths seen by PC Measurement Nat’l % of deaths with PC consult (any LOS) 71/190 (37%)166/327 (51%)13% % of deaths with PC consult (LOS <2 days) 6/62 (10%)14/83 (17%) % of deaths with PC consult (LOS >2 days) 65/128 (51%)149/244 (61%)

Know who you serve: Administration Palliative care can facilitate more effective utilization of scarce hospital resources – Assist in care planning for chronic, complex patients – Long Stay Committee; Case Management Rounds; Ethics – Identify options for right setting of care Healthcare Reform – Patient-Centered Medical Home-Priority for ambulatory palliative care – High hospital occupancy rate (challenge for inpatient unit) Educational Mission – Fellowship; Resident Rotation; Medical Student Rotation

CCHHS Palliative Care Impact JSHRushUICMercyU of CSinai % of Deaths with ICU Admission % of Deaths in Hospital Hospice Enrollment Hospice Days (per decedent) Lowest death rates associated with ICU admission Second lowest hospital deaths Second highest hospice enrollment Highest length of stay in hospice care Among Medicare Decedents:

2012 Statistics: Ambulatory PC Cost savings-$840, million Cost AnalysisFactorsCost savings/revenue Hospital CostsTotal per day$3,426 Total inpt cost$ ,063 Potential Cost- avoidance Total cost savings (110 pts)$840,070-1,216,930 Potential Revenue generation Revenue in outpatient$48, : Total number of paracentesis performed-110 home or clinic Assumptions: Hospitalization for paracentesis is 2-3 days with admit thru ED Charge code at $439