judith r. peres, lcsw-c long term care discussion group july 23, 2015

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Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

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Page 1: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

Judith R. Peres, LCSW-CLong Term Care Discussion GroupJuly 23, 2015

Page 2: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

Dying in America

IOM 2013 Committee on Approaching DeathRecommendations

Role of IOM – Public Policy

Opportunities for Long-term Care

Overview

Page 3: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

Dying in the United States Today2.5 million people die each year

83% are Medicare Beneficiaries

Common ways of dying:

Page 4: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

Dying will always be hard

Two fundamental facts ensure that the transition to death will remain difficult:

1. Medicine's inability to predict the future.

2. A widespread and deeply held desire not to be dead.

Page 5: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

But it doesn’t have to be this hard

In the absence of conversations about prognosis, goals, and outcomes of treatment, patients do not have the opportunity to express their values and preferences. Leading clinicians to assume that patients want additional interventions, even late in the illness. JAMA Intern Med.2014;174(12)

Page 6: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

How Americans Wish to Die

Page 7: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

“Approaching Death in America: Improving Care at the End of Life” IOM, 1997

• Good Death – free from avoidable distress and suffering for patients, families and caregivers, in accord with patients’ and families wishes; and consistent with clinical, cultural & ethical standards

• Bad death – needless suffering, disregard for patient or family wishes or values and a sense among participants that norms of decency have been offended

Page 8: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

IOM 2013 Committee on Approaching Death: Addressing Key End of Life Issues

Current state of end of life care with respect to: Delivery of medical care and social supports Patient-family-provider communication of values

and preferences Advance care planning Health care costs, financing, and reimbursement Education of health professionals, patients and

loved ones, and the public at large

Page 9: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

Dying in AmericaKey Conclusions

Major gaps in care near end of life

Urgent attention needed from numerous stakeholder groups

Person-centered, family-oriented approach to care near the end of life should be a high national priority

Compassionate, affordable, and effective care is an achievable goal

Released September 17, 2014Report available: www.nap.edu

Page 10: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

Dying in AmericaFive Recommendations

1) Person-centered, family-oriented (palliative) care

2) Clinician-patient communication and advance care planning

3) Professional education and development

4) Policies and payment systems

5) Public education and engagement

Page 11: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

Key Recommendations

1. Person-centered, family-oriented (palliative) care

All insurers should cover comprehensive care for individuals with advanced serious illness who are near the end of life.

“Comprehensive Care” Seamless, high quality, consistently accessible around the clock; Consider evolving biopsychosocial/spiritual needs; Coordinated –across all sites of care; Consistent with person’s values goals and INFORMED preference.

Page 12: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

One Solution: Palliative Care

Page 13: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

Key Recommendations

2. Clinician-patient communication and advance care planning

Professional and quality organizations should develop standards for clinician-patient communication and advance care planning that are measurable, actionable, and evidence based.

Adherence to these standards should be tied to credentialing, licensing, and reimbursement.

Page 14: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

•Welcome to Medicare – 2003•Affordable Care Act - 2010•Wellness Visit – 2011•CPT Editorial Panel -2016 ACP services Codes - 99497 & 99498

Comments Due 9/8/15!

Public Policy Attempts to “have the conversation”

Page 15: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

Workbooks, tools

Page 16: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

3. Professional Education and Development

Establish training, certification, and licensure requirements that strengthen the palliative care knowledge and skills of all clinicians who care for individuals with advanced serious illness…

Key Recommendations

Page 17: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015
Page 18: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

4. Policies and Payment Systems Federal, state, private insurance and health

care delivery programs should integrate the financing and delivery of medical and social services;

And require public reporting of quality and costs for care near the end of life.

Key Recommendations

Page 19: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

Key Recommendations

Policies and Payment Systems Require the use of interoperable electronic health records that

incorporate advance care planning to improve communication of individuals’ wishes across time, settings, and providers.

Encourage states to develop and implement a Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) paradigm program in accordance with nationally standardized core requirements.

Page 20: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

5. Public Education and Engagement

Every element of society should engage their constituents and provide factual information about care of people with advanced serious illness to encourage advance care planning and informed choice based on the needs and values of individuals.

Key Recommendations

Page 21: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015
Page 22: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

IOM secures services of eminent professionals to examine policy matters pertaining to the health of the public.

IOM under the National Academy of Sciences through its congressional charter as advisor to the federal government.

“IOM” recommendations can have a lot of influence in health care policy decision-making.

Why does the IOM matter?

Page 23: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

IOM has now made clear (in 6 reports):Palliative care IS essential to quality

Institute of Medicine Quality Cancer Care Report:Charting a New Course for a Health System in Crisis (2013)

QOL care

Page 24: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

Palliative Care and Value-Based, Accountable Care Models

Palliative care aligns with new care and innovative payment models

– Helps to reduce avoidable hospitalizations and ED use

– Strengthens person-centeredness and consumer engagement and satisfaction

– Improves coordination along the continuum

– Avoids unnecessary and unwanted service utilization and expense

Page 25: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

Opportunity for Long-term care Educate policy leaders on how to revise existing state and federal

legislation encouraging the integration of medical and social service financing.

Identify and share LTC quality measures related to palliative and end-of-life care.

Support model quality improvement projects focused on the delivery of palliative care in all care settings including LTC.

Demonstrate LTC ability to coordinate care across settings and providers, and improve shared decision making and advance care planning.

Work toward LTC inclusion of electronic health records including incorporating advance care planning to improve communication of individuals’ wishes across time, settings, and providers.

Page 26: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015
Page 27: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

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Report and Dissemination

• Report available: http://www.iom.edu/Reports/2014/Dying-In-America-Improving-Quality-and-Honoring-Individual-Preferences-Near-the-End-of-Life.aspx

• Free slide deck for download

• IOM will engage in 12 month dissemination phase:o Developing materials o Engaging relevant stakeholders and

key audienceso Evaluating tactics to inform future

activities

Page 28: Judith R. Peres, LCSW-C Long Term Care Discussion Group July 23, 2015

Good Reads!