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Community Palliative Care Team What do we do?

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Community Palliative Care Team What do we do? Dr Faith Cranfield Medical Lead, Community Palliative Care Team, St Francis Hospice Background Home care service ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Community Palliative Care Team What do we do?


1
Community Palliative Care TeamWhat do we do?
  • Dr Faith Cranfield
  • Medical Lead, Community Palliative Care Team,
  • St Francis Hospice

2
Background
  • Home care service established by daughters of
    charity in 1989 in a portacabin in Capuchin
    Friary in Raheny
  • 1995 Inpatient unit (19 beds) opened SFH Raheny
  • Two community teams East and West
  • 2011 West team moved to new SFH Blanchardstown

3
Catchment Area
4
Who do we see?
  • Cancer patients. All have incurable, progressive
    disease. Some continue palliative chemotherapy.
  • Patients with MND
  • Patients with other progressive fatal diseases
    terminal care patients receive full service.
    Others receive Palliative Medicine review to
    advise GP on symptom management, end of life
    decision-making.
  • Children with life-limiting illnesses

5
Location of care
  • Home
  • Nursing homes
  • Homeless hostels
  • Long term psychiatric hospitals
  • Sheltered accommodation

6
Team members
  • Nurses 14 WTE CNS, including 1 WTE Management
    (0.5 East CNM, 0.5 West CNM)
  • Medical director ¾ WTE
  • 2 Registrars
  • 2 Full-time Chaplains
  • 2 WTE Social workers

7
Activity 2012
  • New referrals 974. New patients taken on 702.
  • Referral source GP-204
  • Beaumont-261
  • Mater-228
  • James Connolly-39
  • Other 260
  • Nursing visits 8557, Medical visits 693
  • Deaths 701.
  • Home-323,
  • St Francis Hospice -626,
  • other -390

8
What The CPC Team Can Offer
  • Specialist palliative care to patients
  • Specialist palliative advice on patient
    management to professionals (GPs, nursing home
    staff)
  • Support for patients family and professional
    carers
  • 24 hour availability of telephone advice

9
Working hours
  • Mon- Fri normal working hours regular phone
    calls and visits
  • 430-9pm Single nurse on call for North Dublin,
    can do home visit if necessary
  • 9pm til 830 am Telephone advice via night nurses
    in Inpatient Unit in Raheny

10
Accessing the service
  • Referral received
  • Next working day urgency for visit categorised
    based on need diagnosis and disease extent,
    prognosis, functional status, palliative care
    needs
  • Waiting time variable urgent referrals warrant
    telephone contact to explain what the need is,
    identify if a visit is possible.
  • First visit. Once seen, patients given contact
    details and can access 24 hour advice.

11
Where do we fit in?
  • GP remains primary carer
  • Hospital care continues as appropriate
  • Ongoing nursing telephone support and visits (NB
    all changes warrant review of effectiveness)
  • PHN continues to review for pressure care needs,
    dressing needs, assessment and access to
    community physiotherapy/OT and to home carer
    support

12
Input by CPC Team
  • Visits by CNS frequency will depend on needs,
    patient preference, patients hospital
    appointments etc. Often weekly.
  • Social work assessments/support
  • At home/at hospice/Family meetings
  • Chaplaincy visits at home
  • Referral to Day care or Inpatient care as
    appropriate
  • Volunteer Service

13
Introduction of Hospice
  • Often emotional for patient and family
  • Breaking bad news
  • Dying
  • Anxiety re changing care/health
  • Sense of abandonment
  • Getting to know new team of health care
    professionals

14
Challenges
  • Establishing a good rapport trust
  • Dealing with collusion
  • Balancing patient and family needs
  • Not meeting expectations e.g. hands on care
  • Ensuring consistency amongst healthcare
    professionals information

15
Assessment
  • Symptom assessment physical. Clarifying
    medication.
  • Addressing emotional / psychological / spiritual
    concerns
  • Address family concerns
  • Offer counselling / support
  • Offer volunteers
  • Daycare
  • In-patient Care
  • Liaise with other health care professionals

16
Physical Symptoms
  • Fatigue/Lack of energy/Weakness
  • Anorexia
  • Pain
  • Dry mouth/sore mouth
  • Nausea
  • Early satiety
  • Vomiting
  • Constipation
  • Diarrhoea
  • Dyspnoea
  • Cough
  • Delirium
  • Poor sleep
  • Restlessness
  • Falls

17
Psychological Issues
  • Loss of role
  • Worry about family
  • Fear of dying in pain
  • The meaning of life
  • Helplessness / being a burden
  • Fear of death
  • Loss of control
  • Loss of dignity / privacy
  • Financial difficulties
  • Loss of future
  • Anxiety
  • Depression

18
Psychological Issues for Family
  • Grief and distress
  • Exhaustion emotional and physical
  • Coping with competing demands
  • Their loved ones distressed
  • Unfamilarity with death and dying
  • Fear of what is to come
  • Fear of being incompentent
  • Fear of doing harm
  • Disagreement/discord within family

19
Spiritual distress
  • Trying to make sense of things the Why? Of what
    is happening.
  • Trying to find meaning
  • Concerns about afterlife
  • Prayer for support

20
Decision making at home -in the event of physical
change
  • What do we think is the cause?
  • Information
  • Access to tests. Mostly clinical assessment, /-
    CIT
  • Is it reversible? Will treating the cause change
    the outcome? Does this warrant admission?
  • What are the symptoms and how can we alleviate
    them?
  • What does the patient want?
  • In light of the change, is the situation
    sustainable?

21
Medication
  • Huge source of distress
  • Poor swallow
  • Weakness
  • Drowsiness
  • Under dosage
  • Over dosage

22
Nutrition
  • Food important part of life
  • - Shows love and concern
  • - Sharing / nurturing
  • Food becomes a burden
  • Issue of starvation
  • Natural process
  • Burden and benefit

23
Physical Environment
  • House
  • Stairs
  • Downstairs Toilet
  • Unsuitable accomodation
  • Lack of equipment
  • Lack of carers

24
Example JD, 48
  • JD, 48 y/o lady with metastatic non-small cell
    cancer. On chemotherapy. Separated working
    mother, self-employed. Two children.
  • Seen at home. Angry, wary. Concerns raised re
    teenage daughter acting up, not aware of extent
    of disease. Planning for future care of
    daughters.
  • Chemotherapy poorly tolerated vomiting, sepsis.
    Stopped.
  • Recovers partially. Family meeting re illness.

25
  • Develops vomiting. Due to see solicitor at home
    that evening re will etc
  • SC infusion antiemetic. GP review. Bloods by CIT
    hypercalcaemia and uraemia
  • Glad of admission via day ward for fluids and
    bisphosphonate
  • D/C home on SC infusion. Stopped after a few
    days.

26
  • Develops back pain known bony vertebral
    disease. Settles with opioids problematic
    constipation. Referred to radiation oncology.
    Receives thoracic XRT.
  • Progressive weakens over weeks. Spending much of
    the day in bed. Worried re children. Expressing
    wish to die in hospice, but stay at home as long
    as manageable.

27
  • Back pain escalates over a week medications
    titrated with GP. Falls secondary to leg weakness
    and difficulty passing urine.
  • Catheterised. Listed for admission to St Francis.
    No bed. Night-nurse organised.
  • Bed becomes available. JD admitted to St Francis
    for terminal care. Dies after a two week
    admission.

28
Difficulties For CPC Team Working In Other
Institutions
  • Nursing home staff fill dual role professional
    carer / locum family member
  • Homecare assumptions re nurse/carer familiarity
    with palliative drugs
  • Difficulty meeting family members unlike home
  • Changes in medication often slower to achieve
    than in the home

29
Liaising and communicating
  • With whom?
  • The patient
  • The family
  • The GP
  • The PHN
  • Irish Cancer Society Night nursing service
  • CIT
  • The Hospital team
  • A and E

30
Anticipatory planning
31
Misconceptions
  • We visit at anytime
  • We stay all the time
  • We come when someone dies
  • We come in an emergency
  • We replace all other community services we come
    in and take over
  • We have immediate access to beds
  • We arrange everything
  • We insist people know we are from the hospice

32
Why do it?
  • Achievement Enabling family to cope
  • Enabling patient to die at home
  • Improving someones subjective quality of life
    when time is short, the quality of each day can
    become very important
  • Challenging
  • Privilege

33
Thank you for listening
  • Any questions?
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