Having the End of Life Conversation: Practical Concepts for Advocacy Within the Continuum of Care

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Having the End of Life Conversation: Practical Concepts for Advocacy Within the Continuum of Care July 24, 2012 Presented by: Cindy Campbell RN, BSN Associate Director, Operational Consulting Fazzi Associates Kim Kranz RN, BSN VP Hospice Home Nursing Agency 243 King Street, Suite 246 Northampton, MA 01060 413-584-5300 Fax: 413-584-0220 www.fazzi.com

Instructions and Handouts for: Having the End of Life Conversation: Practical Concepts for Advocacy Within the Continuum of Care Eastern Central Mountain Pacific Standard Time Standard Time Standard Times Standard Time 1:00 PM to 2:00 PM 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM 11:00 AM to 12:00 PM 10:00 AM to 11:00 AM It is very important that you have these materials printed and ready to use prior to the start of the training. In order to participate in this training you will need to do the following: Dial 1-877-615-4337 at least 10 minutes prior to the start of the webinar. 1. When asked, enter Passcode 7413443# 2. Give your agency s name. 3. At this time you will be entered into the call and in listen mode. 4. If at any time you need assistance you may press *0 for the operator. 5. There will be a Q & A period toward the end of the session. Questions will be answered in the order in which they are received. To ask a question, press *1. You will have the opportunity to ask your question and then be returned to listen mode. Do not press *1 prior to this time. 6. To view the presentation online you must click on the link sent to you from GoToWebinar.

Executive Leadership Summer Series: Clinical Model Management, Part III Having the End of Life Conversation July 24, 2012 Cindy Campbell RN, BSN Associate Director Operational Consulting Fazzi Associates, Inc. Kim Kranz RN, MSN VP Hospice Home Nursing Agency Executive Leadership Series Part I. Organizational Structure Matters: Learning How to Support Your Changing Model of Care (June 28 th ) Part II. From Home Health to Hospice: Care Management Along the Continuum (July 10 th ) Part III. Having the End of Life Conversation: Practical Concepts for Advocacy Within the Continuum of Care (July 24 th ) Objectives Understand the context for needed change within an evolving healthcare delivery system. Identify executive leadership s responsibility for creating accountability around successful transition to desired end of life care in home health. It starts with a conversation Provide insight into common barriers to having the end of life conversation. Provide clear tools to help optimize advocacy, support smart business strategy within healthcare reform and empower clinicians in this important skillset. 1

Context is Critical Why is it important to empower clinicians with end of life conversation skill-set? Advocacy Business: Reform initiatives are forcing heightened collaboration within the care continuum Reimbursement incentives will reward health systems for lower avoidable rehospitalization within 30 days (e.g.: medical home models, ACO s, bundled payment, money follows the person, etc ). Lower avoidable rehospitalization can be achieved through identifying and advocating for desired level of care at end of life. Why Else is it Important? Effective leadership compels you to: Clarify Expectations of Performance Provide the tools needed to meet the expectation and measure performance Hold them accountable. Clinicians need tools to enhance their competence and comfort when discussing end of life care options with their patients. Hospital Readmission is a Problem; Better Care Transition Can Help 19% of hospitalizations resulted in readmission within 30 days (2008) 2/3 of Medicare, medical DC s are re-hospitalized or dead within a year 19% Medicare Hospital DC s followed by adverse event within 30 days 2/3 drug events, most often judged preventable MedPAC: 75% readmits avoidable (cost-$12b) 25% of re-hospitalizations had 6 or more chronic conditions: common home health cohort Patients at end of life, who want comfort care instead of intervention, often go back in because no one transitioned their care effectively. http://www.dartmouth-hitchcock.org/dhmc-internet-upload/file_collection/jencks_handout.pdf 2

Chronic Illness Facts 80% of healthcare spending related to 20% of population Chronic Disease prevails in this group. 49% of Americans have one or more chronic disease(s). Chronic diseases account for $3 of every $4 spent on healthcare. That s nearly $7,900 (per annum) for every American with a chronic disease. Chronic diseases such as diabetes, cancer, and heart disease are the leading causes of disability and death in the US. Chronic diseases cause 7 out of every 10 deaths http://www.forahealthieramerica.com/ds/impact-of-chronic-disease.html Cultural Mind Shift The continued application of traditional treatment strategies which are valuable to the patient at an earlier time in their health experience has the opposite effect on patients at end of life resulting in inferior outcomes. Daniel Hoefer, MD Associate Medical Director Sharp HospiceCare Optimism Can Cloud Reality Fuzzy Prognostication Increases Cost and Reduces Advocacy Physicians overly optimistic by 530% - our own experience indicates that they are not alone. This denial comes at a cost. Too many direct admits from hospital or ER to hospice while actively dying. Where is the effective transition into end of life care? British Medical Journal; Extent and Determinants of Error in Doctors Prognoses in Terminally Ill Patients; Prospective Cohort Study; Vol. 320(7233), 19 Feb 2000 pp.469-473 3

The Traditional Medical Model This Disease Can Be Cured 27% of patients with incurable terminal disease believed they could have been cured Unresectionable non-small-cell lung cancer 54% AIDS 32% CHF 22% ALS 16% COPD 12% Daniel P Sulamsy, OFM, MD, PhD, et al, The Accuracy of Substituted Judgment in Patients with Terminal Diagnoses, April 1998, Annals of Internal Medicine, Vol 128(8), PP 621-29 Choosing a Proactive Model for Disease Management Addresses total person emotional, physical, spiritual Does not imply disease is curable Prepares patient/family for inevitable outcomes of disease process Choosing a Proactive Model for Disease/ Care Management Uses evidence-based prognostication to anticipate ongoing and future medical needs Facilitates identification of the patient/family members activation with respect to managing their disease-state Identifies and respects patient s goals of care Guides patient through the continuum of their disease process Minimizes unnecessary adverse events 4

Transitional Care/Advanced Disease/ Palliative Models Proactive In-Home Consultative Care Aggressive in-home care vs. reactive care Team approach- RN, MSW, Spiritual Care Evidence-Based Prognostication Physician Directed Qualifying Clinical Criteria Caregiver Support Resources Education Advance Care Planning Planning for the when not the if Facing Mortality No small task Mindfulness to process of discovery Requires values clarification: Self Patient Family/Caregivers Health System Physician Regulatory Guides Overall Prognosis Comorbidities/ ICD-9 and onset /exacerbation dates Advanced Directives, Living Will, DNR OASIS elements/dependence/decline Reform initiatives; reimbursement under new models will eventually motivate MD s to use evidence to better prognosticate 5

Have the Conversation First with yourself; and a mirror if necessary, to find comfort in the inevitable cycle of wellness and illness and end of life. Identify and clarify values. Practice scripted conversations/talking points. Don t lean your values on others. Know your resources to support further care Look for accuracy in prognostication LISTEN TELL ASK TELL The Therapeutic Conversation ASK ASK TELL ASK TELL ASK 6

The Therapeutic Conversation Ask patient or caregiver how they see their situation The Response will usually cue you to deeper questions ask more based on cues LISTEN Silence is POWERFUL and requires patience MD s usual tolerance for silence is ~ 7 seconds My Life Decision in 7 Seconds??? Suggested intervals of silence for > or = to 60 seconds can help unlock dialogue of further questions: Do they want to stay at home? Do they want to go back into the hospital again? What is most important to you today? Do they want comfort or intervention for the disease? What are their greatest fears? What do they want? What does their family know about what they want? What does family want? Identify Goals for all Care (Clinician s Perspective) How does this patient look at discharge? Is their discharge from home health a transition to end of life care? How can the clinician unlock the door to advocacy? 7

Hospice-Myths Create Barriers to Effective Transition! Bust em! Myth: Won t be aggressively managing disease & symptoms Myth: Giving up hope Myth: Giving up my Physician Family unable to care for a loved one who is dying Discuss care provided, payment, length of stay Approach the End of Life Conversation Involve the immediate family Avoid the vague terms Ask the client and their family about their specific questions and concerns Acknowledge the family s emotions Listen to the family and client Continuing the Conversation Hope for the best yet prepare for the worst Avoid medical details paint big picture. Mom has been hospitalized 3 times in the last 6 months for extreme difficultly breathing with her heart condition, she wants to stay home...this is what can be done to help her. 8

Build Skill Set Intentional Approach to Disease Management Along Continuum Look at agency trend to make late referrals to hospice for CHF Introduce concept that we can do this better Remember CHF one of top 3 hospital admitting diagnoses health system priority Healthcare reform Organizational readiness Palliative Care Hospice Who Does Not Qualify Patients pursuing traditional hospital management: seeking interventive care rather than aggressive management of symptoms of disease Patients too early in the disease progression not meeting criteria Patients not willing to participate in developing an advanced health care plan Follow Up with a Plan Transitional care initiatives Support for appropriate depression Decrease stress in caregiver population Advance Directive documentation is tight Plan of care is accurate and updated Learn from best practice/scripting/behaviors for supportive listening 9

Successful Mastery Having the End of Life Conversation Allows clinicians to gain competence in comprehensive home health case management Allows Care Management to work toward goal directed care, provided in the most efficient and effective manner Allows agencies to better reduce avoidable hospitalization; helping their positioning within health system reform Allow us to advocate more fully, more effectively, throughout the lives of our patients. Contact Information Website www.fazzi.com E-Mail ccampbell@fazzi.com Cindy Campbell 413-584-5300 10