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J Pain Symptom Manage · Sep 2023
A Systematic Approach to Assessing and Addressing Palliative Care Needs in an Outpatient Population.
- Kara E Bischoff, Gabriela Vanegas, David L O'Riordan, Bridget Sumser, Judy Long, Jessica Lin, Ann R Berkey, Edward Kobayashi, Carly Zapata, Michael W Rabow, and Steven Z Pantilat.
- Division of Palliative Medicine, Department of Medicine (K.E.B., G.V., D.L.O-R., B.S., J.L., C.Z., M.W.R., S.Z.P.), University of California, San Francisco, California, USA. Electronic address: kara.bischoff@ucsf.edu.
- J Pain Symptom Manage. 2023 Sep 1; 66 (3): 270280.e8270-280.e8.
Context/ObjectivesA critical frontier for palliative medicine is to develop systems to routinely and equitably address the palliative care (PC) needs of seriously ill populations.MethodsAn automated screen identified Medicare primary care patients who had serious illness based on diagnosis codes and utilization patterns. A stepped-wedge design was used to evaluate a six-month intervention through which a healthcare navigator assessed these seriously ill patients and their care partners for PC needs in the domains of 1) physical symptoms, 2) emotional distress, 3) practical concerns, and 4) advance care planning (ACP) via telephone surveys. Identified needs were addressed with tailored PC interventions.ResultsA total of 292/2175 (13.4%) patients screened positive for serious illness. A total of 145 completed an intervention phase; 83 completed a control phase. Severe physical symptoms were identified in 27.6%, emotional distress in 57.2%, practical concerns in 37.2%, and ACP needs in 56.6%. Twenty-five intervention patients (17.2%) were referred to specialty PC compared to six control patients (7.2%). Prevalence of ACP notes increased 45.5%-71.7% (p = 0.001) during the intervention and remained stable during the control phase. Quality of life remained stable during the intervention and declined 7.4/10-6.5/10 (P =0.04) during the control phase.ConclusionThrough an innovative program, patients with serious illness were identified from a primary care population, assessed for PC needs, and offered specific services to meet those needs. While some patients were appropriate for specialty PC, even more needs were addressed without specialty PC. The program resulted in increased ACP and preserved quality of life.Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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