Palliative Care and Delivering Bad News - I-TECH
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Transcript Palliative Care and Delivering Bad News - I-TECH
Palliative Care
Unit 18
HIV Care and ART:
A Course for Healthcare Providers
Learning Objectives
Define palliative care and its role in the
management of HIV
Describe palliative care in the African context
Assess and manage pain and dyspnea in HIV
Communicate bad news and discuss end-of-life
care
2
Introductory Case: Yared
Yared is a 35 year-old HIV+ gentleman who
returns to clinic complaining of nausea and
diarrhea.
6 months ago his ART regimen was changed to
Nelfinavir, AZT, and ddI because of immunologic
treatment failure.
The patient has a history of CNS toxoplasmosis
and pulmonary TB.
He lost his job and started drinking ETOH daily
since his wife died in a car accident 1 year ago.
3
Introductory Case: Yared (cont.)
Alert and oriented, but appears fatigued and
chronically ill
T 37.7 HR 110 BP 90 / 70
47 kg (7 kg weight loss since last visit)
Pale conjunctivae
White plaques on soft palate
Normal exam otherwise
4
Introductory Case: Yared (cont.)
Volume depletion
Nausea & diarrhea
Clinical treatment failure (new thrush, wt loss)
Pallor
Alcohol dependence
Unemployment
What are his palliative care needs?
5
Principles of Palliative Care
Interventions that improve the quality of life for
patients and their families
Prevention and relief of suffering
pain and other physical problems
psychosocial and spiritual issues
An integral part of a comprehensive care and
support framework
6
Principles of Palliative Care
In the framework of a continuum of care from the
time the incurable disease is diagnosed until the
end of life
Regards dying as a normal process and affirms
life
Offers support to help the patient and family
cope during the patient’s illness and in the
bereavement period
7
Pre-HAART Palliative Care Model
Therapies to modify disease
(curative, restorative intent)
Diagnosis
Hospice
6m
Death
Bereavement
Care 8
The Role of Palliative Care in
HAART Era
Therapies to modify disease
(curative, restorative intent)
Life
Closure
Actively
Dying
Diagnosis
6m
Death
Palliative Care: interventions intended to
Bereavement
relieve suffering and improve quality of life
9
Care
Palliative Care and ART
Antiretroviral therapy does not avert the need
for palliative care
40–50% of patients experience virological failure
40% of patients have adverse reactions
HIV-related cancers still occur
Psychological and spiritual needs persist
10
Role of Palliative Care in HIV
Treatment of antiretroviral side effects
Management of HIV complications
Relief of psychosocial challenges
Improved ART adherence
Reduction of drug resistance in the individual
and community
Preparation for end-of-life
11
Introductory Case: Yared (cont.)
Nausea
Diarrhea
Fatigue
Substance dependence
Unemployment
Lack of social support
12
Return to Case Study
Yared returns to the clinic 1 month later
His diarrhea and nausea have improved with
interventions offered at the last visit. He is still
fatigued, however, and continues to use ETOH.
He is now living with his uncle 500 km away
from clinic.
13
Palliative Care in Africa
Palliative care models for developed countries
may not work in Africa
Feasibility ?
Accessibility ?
Sustainability ?
Cultural diversity ?
14
Challenges to Palliative Care in Africa
Late disease presentation
Inadequate diagnostic facilities and assessment
skills
Poor availability of chemotherapy and
radiotherapy
Absence of opioids
Regulatory and pricing obstacles
Ignorance and false beliefs
15
Cultural Variation and Preferences
A “good death” in Africa varies culturally and
historically
Bearing bad news could be seen as the cause
of a terminal illness
Labeling patients as “terminally ill” may have
harmful consequences
Isolation
Denied access to care
Traditions need to dictate appropriate models of
care
16
Palliative Care Needs in Africa
Hospice care (home and hospice center)
Pain and symptom control
Financial support
Emotional and spiritual support
Food and shelter
Legal help and school fees
17
Models in Africa
Home-based care has been the most common
service model in Africa
Limitations of home-care models
Inadequately trained care givers
Lack access to essential drugs
Limited access for patients in inaccessible
geographical areas
Stigma
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WHO Palliative Care Project
WHO “community health approach to palliative
care for HIV/AIDS and cancer patients in Africa
project.” 2001
Botswana, Ethiopia, Uganda, Tanzania, and
Zimbabwe
Objective
Improve the quality of life of patients and their families
in African countries
Develop home based palliative care models
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End of Life Experience in Ethiopia
86 adults surveyed
Families members of a person bed-ridden with AIDS
The most common problems identified:
• Pain associated with the illness (76%)
• Vomiting, diarrhea, and appetite loss (30%)
• Cost of and lack of drugs
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End of Life Experience in Ethiopia (2)
Patient needs were not met in most cases
Relief of pain
Relief of symptoms
Burden on family
Education interruption
Financial constraints
Emotional (anxiety, fear, sadness)
Physical
21
The Role of Stigma in Ethiopia
Physician reluctance to pass bad news to
patients on any health matter, especially AIDS
Fear of discrimination often prevents many
Ethiopians from seeking treatment for AIDS
Many people with AIDS have been evicted from
their homes by their families and rejected by
their friends and colleagues
Infected children are often orphaned or
abandoned
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Direction of Palliative Care in Africa
Understanding of the capacity and needs of the
community
Innovation within a framework
Trend towards home-based care (e.g. Ethiopia)
Integrated approach with strong referral links
Addresses need at all stages of disease
Provision of simple protocols
The WHO Integrated Management of Adolescent
Illness (IMAI) manual
Advocacy
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Introductory Case: Yared (cont.)
Yared returns to the clinic 4 months later
He is very fatigued and has developed burning
lower extremity pain.
24
Advanced HIV:
A Spectrum of Symptoms
Pain
Diarrhea, nausea, vomiting
Fever
Dyspnea, cough
Fatigue
Orthopnea, PND
Skin disorders
Confusion
Depression, anxiety, fatigue, fear
25
Pain
The symptom most feared when patients
contemplate death
Usually a manifestation of physical distress
May be exacerbated by anxiety, fear, depression
Ability to tolerate and cope with pain varies
drastically between patients
26
Pain Syndromes in HIV
Abdominal pain
Peripheral neuropathy
Oropharyngeal pain
Headache pain
Post-herpetic neuralgia
Musculoskeletal pain
27
Peripheral Neuropathies
Among the most common causes of pain in HIV
The neuropathies associated with HIV can be
classified as
Primary HIV-associated
Secondary diseases caused by
• Neurotoxic substances
• Opportunistic infections
Grouped by
Timing in relation to onset of HIV infection
Clinical and diagnostic features
28
Distal Symmetrical Sensory
Polyneuropathy (DSSP)
Most frequent neurological complication
associated with HIV infection
> 1/3 of HIV-infected patients
Pathophysiology unclear
Course: Slowly progressive sensory features
Location: feet, lower extremity, sometimes
hands; symmetrical distribution
29
Clinical feature of DSSP
Symptoms
Pain
Tingling
Numbness
Signs
Depressed or absent ankle reflexes
Elevated vibration threshold at toes and ankles
Decreased sensitivity to pain and temperature in a
stocking distribution
30
NRTI associated DSSP
Thought to be secondary to mitochondrial toxicity from
ddI, d4T or ddC
Clinically indistinguishable from HIV-related DSSP
Temporal relationship to NRTI drug use
Up to 30% of patients affected; after 3-6 mo of use
May be permanent
Increase risk associated with advanced HIV disease,
alcoholism, diabetes, vitamin B12 or thiamine deficiency,
and neurotoxic drugs (e.g. INH)
31
NRTI associated DSSP (2)
Early recognition is critical
NRTI dosing
May be dose-reduced
May be stopped and switched to an alternate nontoxic antiretroviral agent
Symptomatic relief may begin to be noted
approximately 4 weeks after discontinuation of
the neurotoxic antiretroviral
In some patients, symptoms may persist, most
likely because of coexistent HIV DSSP
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Assessment of Neuropathic Pain
History: onset, duration, character, and severity
(scale 1-10)
Physical examination:
Pain and temp (diminished sensation in DSSP)
Ankle reflexes (absent or depressed in DSSP)
Vibratory (elevated thresholds at the toes in DSSP)
Proprioception and muscle strength (preserved
except in severe cases of DSSP)
33
Pharmacologic Management of
Neuropathic Pain
Mild pain: Non-opioid analgesics
Ibuprofen 600-800mg orally three times per day
Paracetamol (Acetaminophen)
Moderate-to-severe pain: opioid analgesic combinations
Paracetamol plus codeine
Adjuvant analgesics
• TCAs (Amitriptyline)
• Anti-epileptics (Lamotrigine and Gabapentin)
Severe pain: opioid analgesic
Morphine
34
Return to Case Study
Yared returns to clinic 2 weeks later with
continued pain despite
Dose reduction in ddI (200 bid ->125 bid)
Stopping ETOH
Taking Ibuprofen 600mg bid.
Physical examination is unchanged
35
WHO 3-step Analgesics Ladder
3 severe
■ Morphine
2 moderate
■ Hydromorphone
■ A/Codeine
■ Methadone
■ A/Hydrocodone
■ Levorphanol
■ ASA
■ A/Oxycodone
■ Fentanyl
■ Acetaminophen
■ A/Dihydrocodeine
■ Oxycodone
■ NSAIDs
■ ± Adjuvants
■ ± Adjuvants
1 mild
■ ± Adjuvants
36
Return to Case Study
Yared returns 2 months later
He is tachypneic, cyanotic, delirious, and unable
to stand.
He says to you “I can’t breath”.
37
Dyspnea
A subjective awareness of difficulty or distress
associated with breathing
Mechanisms are not well understood
Often ignored by health professionals
The patient's report is the best indicator of dyspnea
Not respiratory rate and oxygenation status
Often takes a chronic course of respiratory decline
Punctuated by episodes of acute shortness of breath
and increased anxiety
38
Causes of Dyspnea in HIV
Opportunistic infections
Pulmonary malignancies
Pneumothorax
Asthma
Bronchiectasis
Pulmonary embolism
Severe anemia
Congestive heart failure
Debilitation / severe wasting
39
Assessment of Dyspnea
History
Onset, duration, PCP-prophylaxis
Physical exam
Vitals, Pulmonary, Cardiac, Extremities, etc
Diagnostic testing
CXR, CBC, Chemistry
Prompt diagnosis
Ensure best chance of curative treatment
40
Return to Case Study
Onset of dyspnea was gradual, and associated
with dry cough and fever. He stopped taking
Bactrim one month ago
T 38.5 HR 110 BP 98 / 70 RR 35
Pale, cyanotic, fatigued
Cardiac and lung exam were normal
No lower extremity edema
Laboratory:
Hgb 5 gm/dl, MCV 104, Creatinine 1.1.
41
Introductory Case: Yared (cont.)
42
© Slice of Life and Suzanne S. Stensaas
Introductory Case: Yared (cont.)
Yared was admitted to the hospital and started
on high dose Co-trimoxazole plus steroids for
treatment of PCP
He was also provided a blood transfusion.
43
Nonpharmacologic
Treatment of Dyspnea
Position patient for comfort
Prop patient forward using pillows
May allow better lung expansion / gas exchange
Provide cool circulating air
Encourage presence of family and caregivers
Consider pursed-lip breathing
Promote soothing activities, such as prayer or
listening to relaxing music
44
Oxygen Therapy
Titrated to comfort is recommended for
terminally-ill, hypoxemic, and dyspneic patients
Role in treating patients who are not hypoxemic
is less clear
Many patients and families believe that oxygen
can alleviate shortness of breath
If it does no harm, oxygen administration may
confer a psychological benefit
45
Pharmacologic
Management of Dyspnea
Opioids - the primary modality
Mechanism of action is not clearly understood
Start low dose (5 to 10 mg PO morphine or 2 to 4 mg
IV or SC morphine)
Start early in course of dyspnea
• help reduce the effects of respiratory depression
• allows for rapid titration to levels that can comfort the
patient and reduce anxiety
46
Pharmacological
Management of Dyspnea
Anxiolytics
Should be considered as a second-line intervention
Used when a "true” anxiety (psychological rather than
physiologic in origin) is perceived
Disease specific treatment
Bronchodilators
Diuretics
Steroid
Antibiotics
47
Cough
Violent expiration of air through the glottis
Thought to result from irritation and inflammation
of sensory receptors in the tracheobronchial tree
Usually related to
Increased mucus production
Aspiration of mucus
Gastric contents
48
Cause of Cough in HIV
Inflammatory processes caused by infections
Tuberculosis
Bacterial / fungal pneumonia
Bronchial lesions
Lung parenchymal disease
49
Management of Cough
Avoid stimuli that may induce coughing
smoke, cold air, exercise
Elevate head of bed (reduce gastroesophageal
reflux)
Bronchodilators
Corticosteroids
Cough suppressant (when no therapeutic
reason to stimulate cough)
Opioid based medicine
50
Delirium
An acute confusional state
Disturbances of level of consciousness
Attention
Thinking
Perception
Memory
Psychomotor behavior
Progresses rapidly over hours or days
Early symptoms are often nonspecific
irritability
disturbances in the sleep-wake cycle
51
Cause of Delirium in HIV
Infection
Metabolic
Drugs
Endocrine
Inflammation
Vascular
Malignancy
52
Management of Delirium
Assess and treat underlying cause
Create quiet, familiar, comfortable environment
If persistent
Antipsychotics (Haloperidol)
Anxiolytics (Diazepam) – use with caution; may
worsen confusion
53
Introductory Case: Yared (cont.)
Despite 10 days of appropriate therapy for PCP,
the patient’s condition continues to deteriorate.
Additional measures have been taken to
manage the patient’s dyspnea, cough, and
delirium. AB’s uncle and sister arrive later to the
hospital. The family wants to know his status
and prognosis.
54
Bad News
Physicians are continuously faced with the
challenge of telling patients and their families
bad news
55
Clinical Outcomes
How bad news is discussed has implications
patient's comprehension of information
satisfaction with medical care
level of hopefulness
subsequent psychological adjustment
Delivering unfavorable medical information does
not necessarily cause psychological harm
Patients desire accurate information to assist
them in making important quality-of-life
decisions
56
Response to Bad News
When patients are given bad news, they have a
wide variety of reactions.
There is no single reaction to expect.
Possible reactions:
Shock
Fright
Accept
Sadness
Not worried
57
Discussing Death:
Cultural Perspectives
Some cultures believe that discussion of death
can hasten it
African-Americans
Native-Americans
Immigrants from China, Korea, Mexico
Ethiopians?
Need to explore individual perspectives
58
Barriers to Delivering Bad News
People who deliver bad news experience strong
emotions
MD reluctance to deliver bad news
Anxiety
Burden of responsibility for the news
Fear of negative evaluation
Fear of destroying hope
Inadequacy dealing with the patient's emotions
59
Patient and Clinician
Stress Related to Bad News
Clinician
Patient
Stress
Encounter
Time
60
A Recommended Protocol for
Giving Bad News (SPIKES)
Set up the interview: mental and physical
preparation
Perception: assess what the patient knows
about the medical situation
Invitation: ask how much they want to know
Knowledge: give the medical facts
Emotion: respond to patients emotions
Strategy and summary: negotiate a concrete
follow-up step
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STEP 1: Setting up the Interview
Mental rehearsal
Anticipate difficult emotions / questions
Review strategy / importance of giving information
Select appropriate setting
Privacy
Involve significant others
Sit down
Initiate connection
Manage time constraints
62
STEP 2: Perception
“Before you tell, ask”
Use open ended questions
“What is your understanding of your medical
situation?”
“What have you been told about your medical
condition?”
Correct misinformation
Tailor bad news to patients understanding
Uncover forms of illness denial
63
STEP 3: Invitation
Majority of patients want full information (US &
Europe)
BUT some do not
“How would you like me to give the information about
the tests?”
“Would you like me to give all the information?”
64
STEP 4: Knowledge
Warn the patient that bad news is coming
“I have some bad news about the results of your
blood test.”
Use language at the level of comprehension and
vocabulary of the patient
Use non-technical terminology
Avoid excessive bluntness
Assess patient’s understanding frequently
“Did you understand that? Did that make sense to
you?”
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STEP 5: Emotion
Observe
Identify
Connect cause
Communicate understanding
Empathize
“I know that this isn't what you wanted to hear”
I wish the news were better”
Reduce the patient's isolation
Validate patient's feelings
66
STEP 6: Strategy
Develop a clear follow-up plan
Address patient goals
Discuss management options when patient is
ready
Share responsibility for decision-making
67
End-of-Life Discussion
Utilize SPIKES principles
Elicit patient/family’s understanding and values
Use language appropriate to the patient
Align patient and clinician views
Use repetition to show you are listening
Acknowledge emotions, difficulty, fears
Use reflection to show empathy
Tolerate silences
68
Key Points
Palliative care
is integral to HIV care from the time of diagnosis
Palliative care faces unique challenges in Africa and
must be culturally sensitive
Management of pain and dyspnea includes both
pharmacological and non-pharmacological methods
Pain is common in HIV and can be managed
according to WHO pain ladder
Delivering bad news and talking about death is part of
effective palliative care
69
Key Points
Delivering Bad News
Giving bad news and talking about death is a
fundamental communication skill for doctors
Exploring individual and cultural beliefs is important in
adapting the bad news communication to each patient
How bad news is delivered can affect how patients
adjust to their illness
70