Community Palliative Care Team
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Transcript Community Palliative Care Team
Community Palliative Care Team
What do we do?
Dr Faith Cranfield
Medical Lead, Community Palliative Care Team,
St Francis Hospice
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
Catchment Area
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 decisionmaking.
Children with life-limiting illnesses
Location of care
Home
Nursing homes
Homeless hostels
Long term psychiatric hospitals
Sheltered accommodation
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
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
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 patient’s family and professional carers
24 hour availability of telephone advice
Working hours
Mon- Fri normal working hours – regular phone calls
and visits
4:30-9pm Single nurse on call for North Dublin, can do
home visit if necessary
9pm til 8:30 am Telephone advice via night nurses in
Inpatient Unit in Raheny
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.
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
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
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
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
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
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
Psychological Issues
Loss of role
Worry about family
Loss of dignity / privacy
Fear of dying in pain
Financial difficulties
The meaning of life
Loss of future
Helplessness / being a
Anxiety
burden
Fear of death
Loss of control
Depression
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
Spiritual distress
Trying to make sense of things –the Why? Of what is
happening.
Trying to find meaning
Concerns about afterlife
Prayer for support
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?
Medication
Huge source of distress
Poor swallow
Weakness
Drowsiness
Under dosage
Over dosage
Nutrition
Food important part of life
- Shows love and concern
- Sharing / nurturing
Food becomes a burden
Issue of starvation
Natural process
Burden and benefit
Physical Environment
House
Stairs
Downstairs Toilet
Unsuitable accomodation
Lack of equipment
Lack of carers
Example –JD, 48
JD, 48 y/o lady with metastatic non-small cell cancer. On
chemotherapy. Separated working mother, selfemployed. 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.
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.
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.
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.
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
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
Anticipatory planning
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
Why do it?
Achievement – Enabling family to cope
Enabling patient to die at home
Improving someone’s subjective quality of life –when time is short, the
quality of each day can become very important
Challenging
Privilege
Thank you for listening
Any questions?