Journal of palliative medicine
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Specialty-aligned palliative care (SAPC) refers to interprofessional palliative care (PC) that is delivered to a specific population of patients in close partnership with other primary or specialty clinicians. As evolving PC models address physical, psychosocial, and spiritual suffering across illnesses and settings, PC clinicians must acquire advanced knowledge of disease-specific symptoms, common treatments, and complications that impact prognosis and outcomes. ⋯ Furthermore, to provide effective SAPC, PC clinicians must learn about the specific symptoms, prognoses, and common treatments of the patients they are serving. They must also build trusting relationships and maintain open communication with patients and referring clinicians to ensure integrated and aligned PC delivery.
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As patients live longer with left ventricular assist device (LVAD) support, many will either suffer an acute event or develop a gradual, progressive disease that results in a terminal prognosis. At the end-of-life, patients, and more often, their families, will be faced with the decision to deactivate the LVAD to allow natural death. The process of LVAD deactivation carries some distinct features that distinguish it from withdrawal of other forms of life-sustaining medical technology: multidisciplinary collaboration is paramount; prognosis after deactivation is short, typically minutes-hours; and premedication doses of symptom-focused medications are typically higher than other situations involving withdrawal of life-sustaining medical technologies given the precipitous decline in cardiac output following LVAD deactivation. In this Case Discussion, we introduce the complexity of planned in-hospital LVAD deactivation through a clinical case, share our detailed institutional checklist and order set for LVAD deactivation, and broach multidisciplinary clinical protocol development processes.
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The World Health Organization defines palliative care by its focus on improving quality of life (QOL). Although reducing suffering is part of improving QOL, it should not be the sole focus of our efforts. ⋯ The "Total Enjoyment of Life" provides a framework for reminding clinicians to systematically address positive outcomes. This framework can also be used to suggest clinical strategies for promoting positive outcomes and expanding the scope of interventions and outcomes to be considered in clinical research.
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Background: MemorialCare Medical Group (MCMG) designed and implemented an advanced health care practitioner (AHP)-led home-visit primary care program to address the needs of a frail older adult population, who struggled with arriving for in-office care. We sought to perform a preliminary analysis to determine the program's efficacy. ⋯ Mean IPVs (2.42-1.56), EDVs (1.53-0.93), and 30DRs (0.27-0.13) were reduced. Conclusions: Initial analysis of an AHP-led in-home primary care program for frail seniors shows promise for improved outcomes with a clear decrease in the total cost of care.
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Background: The number of individuals dying of Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRDs) is steadily increasing and they represent the largest group of hospice enrollees. In 2020, 15.4% of hospice patients across the United States were discharged alive from hospice care, with 5.6% decertified due to being "no longer terminally ill." A live discharge from hospice care can disrupt care continuity, increase hospitalizations and emergency room visits, and reduce the quality of life for patients and families. Furthermore, this discontinuity may impede re-enrollment into hospice services and receipt of community bereavement services. ⋯ However, some believed they would have to wait for a medical crisis (n = 6) to re-enroll, while others (n = 10) questioned the appropriateness of hospice for patients with ADRDs if they cannot remain in hospice care until death. Conclusions: A live discharge for ADRD patients impacts caregivers' decisions on whether they will choose to re-enroll a patient who has been discharged alive from hospice. Further research and support of caregivers through the discharge process are necessary to ensure that patients and their caregivers remain connected to hospice agencies postdischarge.