ARTICLES / Homecare / ON YOUR
BEHALF.../
Other Articles
Share This Article
ON YOUR BEHALF: Home Hospice
Programs
Are Getting Stronger
By Connie Ford, RN, MPA
When you learn to die, you learn to
live. That is the compelling theme of the well-known
book, Tuesdays with Morrie. Learning to die is a
personal process; no one else can do it for us. It is
possible, however, that caring for another during his or
her end of life pilgrimage may help with our own process
of learning.
One day while touring a new senior housing complex, a
local minister commented that the people he used to
visit in nursing homes are now being cared for at home.
His casual observations are pretty accurate. Nursing
home professionals would not only agree, but they would
also relate that their frail residents are living longer
with chronic illnesses and require more care and caring
than in years past.
Can nursing homes really provide the needed care and
caring? Nursing home admissions for extended stays are
declining. People are finding ways to stay at home. They
desperately wish to preserve personal dignity. They also
fear a loss of control, poor care and perhaps a painful
death. Various state initiatives provide care services
so people may successfully stay home and ‘age in place.’
When people encounter the end of life, we typically do
not hear about fears relating to care and caring when
hospice is helping the family. hospice programs
generally receive great accolades for their work.
hospice extends to some nursing homes so eligible
residents can receive the program benefits. In an ideal
world, one would think that hospice in a nursing home
shouldn't be necessary; a nursing home should always be
a premier residence for a ‘good death.’
Why do some nursing homes have arrangements with hospice
programs and others don't? One possible reason is
financial. Government programs such as Medicare and
Medicaid pay a daily rate for hospice. When hospice
provides a nursing home resident with end of life care,
the nursing home becomes a partner with hospice. They
share the daily payment and therefore receive less money
than when they individually provide all of the care. Now
more than ever, because of changes in government
reimbursement and increasing insurance costs, nursing
homes are struggling to survive.
Therefore, we must take an active role in assuring
appropriate end of life care. There are several national
efforts that are helping; two are especially relevant at
this time. In 1999, a national foundation, the Milbank
Memorial Fund, published an important document,
Principles for Care of Patients at the End of Life: An
Emerging Consensus among the Specialties of Medicine. As
caregivers and as mortal human beings, it is reassuring
to know that 14 major societies, including the American
Medical Association and the Joint Commission on
Accreditation of Health Care Organizations (JCAHO), have
created policy that incorporate these principles. The
principles for professional practice include:
Respect for the dignity of both patients and caregivers
Sensitivity to and respect for the patient's and
family's wishes
Use of appropriate measures consistent with patient
choices
Alleviation of pain and other physical symptoms
Assessment and management of psychological, social and
spiritual/religious problems
Offering continuity. The patient should be able to
continue to be cared for by his/her primary care and
specialist providers
Providing access to any therapy, which may realistically
be expected to improve the patient's quality of life,
including alternative or non-traditional treatments
Providing access to palliative care and hospice care
Respecting the patient’s right to refuse treatment
Respecting the physician's professional responsibility
to discontinue some treatments, when appropriate, with
consideration for both patient and family preferences
Promote clinical and evidence-based research on
providing care at the end of life
Your physician and/or the physician treating your loved
one may not yet be familiar with these principles. Often
doctors learn new information from patients and
caregivers. There is no time like the present to share
this information.
Another initiative is a major four part public
television series from Bill Moyers, On Our Own Terms:
Moyers on Dying in America. The first hour-long segment
airs September 10. Accompanying the series is a national
outreach effort to educate the public about end of life
care. Improving care and caring during the final life
passage is an aspect of this life event that society can
impact.
Connie Ford is a principal of Family Caregiver Resources
Group providing consulting and caregiver support
services on a national basis. Comments and questions can
be sent to editor@caregiver.com Further reproduction by
written permission only. For further information links
to Bill Moyers and the Milbank Memorial Fund can be
found at caregiver.com in the Carelinks Directory. A
copy of the full Milbank report may be requested from
the Milbank Memorial Fund (212) 355-8400.
Printable Version
|
|
|