A
new initiative aims to build up a growing trend toward offering palliative care
services in hospital emergency departments.
Traditionally, palliative care has been
thought of as an alternative to hospitalization for patients with terminal
illnesses, allowing them to spend their final months and days in their homes
with a modicum of comfort. But increasingly, hospitals are working to offer
palliative techniques for terminally ill patients who show up in the emergency
room, a phenomenon the Center to Advance Palliative Care hopes to support with
an initiative launched last week, Improving Palliative Care in Emergency
Medicine.
"The emergency department is an
underappreciated but key site for patients and families to receive palliative
care," Tammie E. Quest, M.D., director of the new initiative, said in a
statement. "Seriously ill patients often experience pain and other
symptoms that require immediate evaluation, excellent communication and 24/7
treatment."
While the release from the CAPC was short on
specific action steps, it laid out some general parameters for the expected
benefits of increased integration of palliative care in hospitals, including
better control of symptoms, lower anxiety for patients' families and "more
realistic" care plans better attuned to patients' personal preferences.
For hospitals, the potential benefits listed include reducing length of stay
and readmissions and potentially improving patient satisfaction.
"Every seriously ill hospitalized patient
should have access to palliative care, and the emergency department is no
exception," said Diane E. Meier, M.D., director of the Center to Advance
Palliative Care in a statement. "We expect to see an enormous positive
impact on both patients and their families."
I'll be watching these initiatives with both
personal and professional interest. Years ago, I watched as my grandfather,
after an initial admission for congestive heart failure, spent the last two
weeks of his life subjected to a battery of increasingly complex and
unsuccessful treatments and operations until he finally lost consciousness. Up
until that point, he was mentally sound and in good shape, and it was painful
to watch him suffer in his final days as his worsening physical and mental
condition made it clear to all of us there would be no recovery. While he
didn't need palliative care when he was initially admitted — it wasn't until
after a week in the hospital that he began spiraling downward — at some point
along the line it would have made more sense than the futile operations he had
to endure in the final days of his life. And that's just the personal side of
the story — after decades of good health, a huge chunk of his lifetime medical
bill was spent when he was beyond saving.
Haydn Bush
H&HN
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