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Implementation of Ambulatory Kidney Supportive Care in a Safety Net Hospital

Scherer, Jennifer S; Gore, Radhika J; Georgia, Annette; Cohen, Susan E; Caplin, Nina; Zhadanova, Olga; Chodosh, Joshua; Charytan, David; Brody, Abraham A
CONTEXT/BACKGROUND:Chronic kidney disease (CKD) disproportionately impacts lower socioeconomic groups and is associated with many symptoms and complex decisions. Integration of Kidney Supportive Care (KSC) with CKD care can address these needs. To our knowledge, this approach has not been described in an underserved population. OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:We describe our adaptation of an ambulatory integrated KSC and CKD clinic for implementation in a safety net hospital. We report our utilization metrics; characteristics of the population served; and visit activities. METHODS:We considered modifications from the perspectives of people with CKD, their providers, and the health system. Modifications were informed by meeting notes with key participants (hospital administrators [n = 5], funders [n = 1], and content experts [n = 2]), as well as literature on palliative care program building, safety net hospitals, and KSC. We extracted utilization data for the first 15 months of the clinic's operations, demographics, clinical characteristics, unmet health related social needs, and symptom burden, measured by the Integrated Palliative Outcome Scale-Renal (total Score, and sub-scores of physical, psychological, and practical impact of CKD) from the electronic health record. Results are reported using descriptive statistics. RESULTS:Adaptions were proactive and done by clinical and administrative leaders. Meetings identified challenges of the safety net setting including people presenting with advanced disease and having several social needs. Modifications to our base model were made in staffing, data collection, and work flow. Show rate was approximately 68%, with a majority of people identifying as Black or Hispanic, and uninsured or on Medicaid. Symptom burden was lower than previous reports, driven by a better psychological sub-score. CONCLUSIONS:We describe a feasible ambulatory care model of KSC in a safety net setting that can serve as a framework for the development of other noncancer palliative care ambulatory clinics. Future work will optimize our model.
PMID: 39788301
ISSN: 1873-6513
CID: 5781492

Nurse led telephonic palliative care versus specialty outpatient palliative care: pragmatic, randomised clinical trial

Grudzen, Corita R; Flannery, Mara; Van Allen, Kaitlyn; Cuthel, Allison; Liddicoat Yamarik, Rebecca; Tan, Audrey; Cohen, Susan E; Comstock Barker, Paige; Brody, Abraham A; Herchek, Cheryl; Siman, Nina; Goldfeld, Keith S; ,
OBJECTIVE/UNASSIGNED:To compare the effectiveness of nurse led telephonic palliative care versus specialty outpatient palliative care on quality of life, symptom burden, loneliness, and healthcare use, after attending the emergency department. DESIGN/UNASSIGNED:Pragmatic, randomised clinical trial. SETTING/UNASSIGNED:Emergency Medicine Palliative Care Access (EMPallA) randomised controlled trial enrolling participants from 18 emergency departments in 15 geographically diverse healthcare systems in nine US states, from 1 April 2018 to 30 June 2022. PARTICIPANTS/UNASSIGNED:Of 39 254 eligible patients, 1283 adults who visited the emergency department, were aged ≥50 years, who spoke English or Spanish, and had advanced cancer or end stage organ failure, were randomised to receive nurse led telephonic palliative care (n=639) or specialty outpatient palliative care (n=644). INTERVENTIONS/UNASSIGNED:The nurse led telephonic palliative care arm consisted of weekly or biweekly calls over six months made by registered nurses certified in hospice and palliative care. For the specialty outpatient palliative care arm, patients had one visit each month for six months with a specialty trained hospice and palliative medicine provider. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES/UNASSIGNED:The primary outcome was change in patient reported quality of life at six months, measured by the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General (FACT-G) questionnaire. Secondary outcomes were change in symptom burden and patient reported loneliness after six months, and healthcare use, measured as the number of emergency department revisits, inpatient days, and hospice use, from enrolment to 12 months. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:639 patients were assigned to nurse telephonic services and 434 (68%) engaged in care until death, or until they required hospice services or graduated from the programme. For specialty outpatient palliative care, 644 patients were assigned and 344 (53%) attended one or more visits, with an average of 2.7 visits. The mean change in FACT-G scores over six months for the nurse telephonic arm (n=418) was 3.7 (95% confidence interval (CI) 2.3 to 5.1) points compared with 3.1 (1.6 to 4.6) for those in the specialty outpatient care arm (n=409). In the model including all patients who survived to six months (n=1090), the estimated difference in average change in quality of life was 0.71 (95% CI -1.19 to 2.61) points higher in the nurse led telephonic palliative care arm. The analysis did not show any clinically meaningful differences in the change in quality of life between the treatment arms. Also, no important differences between groups were found for secondary outcomes or in subgroup analyses. CONCLUSIONS/UNASSIGNED:The results of the study provided no clear evidence that nurse led telephonic palliative care improved quality of life, or any secondary outcomes, relative to specialty outpatient palliative care. TRIAL REGISTRATION/UNASSIGNED:ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03325985.
PMCID:12612767
PMID: 41245582
ISSN: 2754-0413
CID: 5975592

A Vital Layer of Support: One Safety Net Hospital's Palliative Care Response to the Pandemic

Xu, Yijie; Zhang, Luyi K; Smeltz, Robert L; Cohen, Susan E
PMID: 33555977
ISSN: 1557-7740
CID: 4780802

Working Upstream in Advance Care Planning in Pandemic Palliative Care

Zaurova, Milana; Krouss, Mona; Israilov, Sigal; Hart, Louis; Jalon, Hillary; Conley, Georgia; Luong, Khoi; Wei, Eric K; Smeltz, Robert; Frankenthaler, Michael; Nichols, Jeffrey; Cohen, Susan; Suleman, Natasha; Ivanyuk, Marina; Shulman, Pavel; Tala, Osbely; Parker, Lauren; Castor, Tita; Pearlstein, Nicole; Kavanagh, Elizabeth; Cho, Hyung J
PMID: 32706629
ISSN: 2326-5108
CID: 4534282

Development of an Outpatient Palliative Care Protocol to Monitor Fidelity in the Emergency Medicine Palliative Care Access Trial

Grudzen, Corita R; Schmucker, Abigail M; Shim, Deborah J; Ibikunle, Aminat; Cho, Jeanne; Chung, Frank R; Cohen, Susan E
PMID: 31486726
ISSN: 1557-7740
CID: 4067522

Playing Together in the Sandbox: An Interprofessional Simulation to Teach Collaborative Communication Skills in a Family Meeting [Meeting Abstract]

Wholihan, Dorothy; Cohen, Susan; Smeltz, Robert
ISI:000348478200109
ISSN: 1873-6513
CID: 1477272

Hidden in Plain Sight: Palliative Care for Undocumented Immigrants [Meeting Abstract]

Kinderman, Anne; Bien, Melanie; Cohen, Susan; Smeltz, Robert
ISI:000348478200055
ISSN: 1873-6513
CID: 1480902

Palliative Care in the Era of Hypothermia Protocols [Meeting Abstract]

Smeltz, Robert; Zelnick, Lisa; Cohen, Susan; Freeman, Rebecca
ISI:000331150000047
ISSN: 0885-3924
CID: 852772

Goals of Care Discussion and Withdrawal of Life-Sustaining Treatment Using High Fidelity Simulation [Meeting Abstract]

Zelnick, Lisa; Cohen, Susan; Gang, Maureen; Smeltz, Robert
ISI:000331150000117
ISSN: 0885-3924
CID: 852812

Medical repatriation at end of life: Barriers, facilitation, and fulfillment-A case-series study at a New York public hospital

Seetharamu, Nagashree; Ma, Hilary Y; Smeltz, Robert; Schindewolf, Jessica; Empalmado, Mariam; Cohen, Susan E
141 Background: Foreign-born cancer patients frequently desire to return to their home country at the end of life. However, many barriers can make this process challenging. We herein present our recent experience with such patients. METHODS: We reviewed charts of terminal cancer patients (pts) who traveled to their homeland at the end of life. Pts' age, diagnoses, co-morbidities, prior cancer-directed treatment, predicted survival, symptoms, code status, admissions within 4 weeks of travel, oxygen need were noted. Interval between decision to travel and travel date, events during travel, and feedback from families, if available were collected. RESULTS: 17 charts (11 female, 6 male) were analyzed. Mean age was 60 years and the most common diagnosis was thoracic malignancy (70%, 12 pts). All pts had disseminated cancer and had received an average of 2 lines of cancer-directed therapy. All had progressive cancers with expected survival <6 months. All were under the care of medical oncologists, palliative care and social work. The mean interval between decision to travel and travel date was 9 days. 8 were hospitalized at least once in the 4 weeks prior to the day of travel and 6 were cared for as inpatients immediately prior to travel. 11 pts were receiving opioids for pain and 3 were oxygen-dependent. 10 had documented discussions regarding resuscitation and 9 were discharged with New York State out-of -hospital DNR forms. All were discharged with medical records, medication supply and provider contact information. Mean travel distance was 4,099 miles. Provider concerns for decompensation during travel included brain herniation (2), spinal cord compression (3), bleeding (1), and sepsis (2). 16 pts successfully completed their journey. 1 pt died en-route prior to boarding the aircraft. 12 pts/families provided positive feedback about the experience. CONCLUSIONS: Return to homeland is an important goal for many terminally ill cancer pts and should be a routine part of end-of-life discussions. Medical repatriation can be accomplished when conducted in a planned, well-coordinated manner. Insights from this review can help us create guidelines that can be readily applied to specific scenarios.
ORIGINAL:0013187
ISSN: 1527-7755
CID: 3590052