2008
DOI: 10.1007/s11524-008-9257-z
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Preliminary Report of a Palliative Care and Case Management Project in an Emergency Department for Chronically Ill Elderly Patients

Abstract: The Palliative Care Service at Montefiore Medical Center (MMC) established a pilot project in the emergency department (ED) to identify chronically ill older adults in need of palliative care, homecare, and hospice services and to link such patients with these services. Two advance practice nurses conducted consultations on elderly patients who were found to have one or more "palliative care triggers" on initial screening. A standardized medical record abstraction form was developed. Service utilization and su… Show more

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Cited by 71 publications
(106 citation statements)
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“…Such measures might include standardized team-family meetings to clarify goals of care, development of triggers for palliative care consultation, adherence to established professional EOL care guidelines, proactive consultation of clinical social workers and chaplains, and promotion of generalist palliative care competencies across all disciplines. [58][59][60][61][62] For patients who cannot leave the hospital, teams should be identifying ways to make inhospital care feel more peaceful and dignified (e.g., 24-hour family access, private hospital rooms) and developing policies to ensure high-quality EOL care in the acute care setting (e.g., protocols for ventilator withdrawal and palliative sedation).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such measures might include standardized team-family meetings to clarify goals of care, development of triggers for palliative care consultation, adherence to established professional EOL care guidelines, proactive consultation of clinical social workers and chaplains, and promotion of generalist palliative care competencies across all disciplines. [58][59][60][61][62] For patients who cannot leave the hospital, teams should be identifying ways to make inhospital care feel more peaceful and dignified (e.g., 24-hour family access, private hospital rooms) and developing policies to ensure high-quality EOL care in the acute care setting (e.g., protocols for ventilator withdrawal and palliative sedation).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The enhanced availability of home hospice and palliative homecare services may account for these patients ability to die in their place of residence. 28,31 The development of hospice contracts with many local longterm-care facilities has permitted terminally ill older adults who require more care than can be provided in the home-care setting with access to an additional tier of services in nursing homes that may also account for some reduced utilization of the acute-care setting by such patients.…”
Section: Hospice Initiatives That Have Focused On Palliative-care Neementioning
confidence: 99%
“…All ED PC referral or integration projects that we examined had some measure of success in terms of increasing PC evaluation and referral from the ED. [69][70][71][72][73] Common weaknesses of prior efforts included absence of evidenced-based development of an ED-specific screening tool, narrow inclusion criteria (i.e., cancer patients only), use of lengthy PC patient assessment tools, and reliance on additional staff to perform screening.…”
Section: Critical Review Of the Literature And Initial Screening Toolmentioning
confidence: 99%