The Oncology Social workers Role in Palliative care' - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The Oncology Social workers Role in Palliative care'

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A Review of the unique and pivotal role the oncology social work ... Lability, irritability. Intellectualization. Grief. Acceptance, spiritual peace. Fears ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Oncology Social workers Role in Palliative care'


1
The Oncology Social workers Role in Palliative
care.
  • A Review of the unique and pivotal role the
    oncology social work plays in the Palliative care
    team.

2
Road Map
  • Importance Advance care planning
  • (speaking about the unspeakable )
  • Preparation for end of life care
  • Professionals role in facilitating open
    communication as part of persevering dignity
    (Intervention strategies that preserve dignity
    and allow for meaning making )
  • Preserving Dignity in Palliative care setting

3
WHO Palliative Care Skills
  • Communication
  • Decision making
  • Management of illness and treatment complications
  • Symptom control
  • Psychological spiritual care of patient and
    family
  • Care of the dying
  • Any National cancer plan should address
    palliative care

4
Model Organisations of Palliative care
  • Fully developed palliative care programs now
    include the following
  • Homecare
  • Hospital based consultation services
  • Daycare
  • Inpatient care
  • Bereavement support
  • Training programs/Research
  • Internet based virtual services

5
Good and Bad Deaths
  • Bad Death
  • Characterized by needless suffering, disregard of
    patient and familys wishes or values sense among
    participants that decency have been offended.
    Death resulting from neglect, violence or
    unwanted and senseless treatment
  • Good Death
  • Free from avoidable distress and suffering for
    the patient, family and caregivers in general
    accord with patients family wishes
    reasonability consistent with clinical cultural
    and ethical standards.
  • Encourages
  • Sensitive regard for the dying patient and how
    life can be lived in the face of death
  • Comes with reasonable warning
  • Occurs in the company of loved ones
  • Provides opportunity for reconciliation with
    family, friends and achieves peace, meaning and
    transcendence

6
Professional Quality End of Live care
  • Overall quality of Live
  • Physical well being and functioning
  • Psychological well being and functioning
  • Spiritual well being
  • Patient perception of care
  • Family well being and perceptions of care

7
Patient Perspective on Quality End of Live care
  • Adequate pain and symptom management
  • Avoiding inappropriate prolongation of dying
  • Achieving a sense of control
  • Relieving the burden
  • Strengthening relationships

8
Dignity and Palliative care
  • Working in palliative care needs a sensitive
    multidisciplinary team that allows for
    interpersonal refection and growth to prevent
    compassion fatigue and burnout.
  • How do we as team members choose to be present
    for our patients in the palliative care setting
    and how are we addressing the needs of our
    patients and their families .
  • Focus on the authenticity of the relationships we
    build with our clients and on intervention
    strategies that have these values at its core .
  • Team Question
  • DID WE DO ENOUGH TO ACHIEVE CURE ,PROLONG
    SURVIVAL?

9
9 dimensionsof assessment
  • 1. Illness / treatment summary
  • 2. Physical
  • 3. Psychological
  • 4. Decision making
  • 5. Communication
  • 6. Social
  • 7. Spiritual
  • 8. Practical
  • 9. Anticipatory planning for death

10
Moving Beyond Symptom management
  • Symptom management as our first priority but not
    ultimate goal
  • Provide symptom management while not being blind
    to the profound personal nature of the dying
    experience
  • Shift from seeing dying as a time of unavoidable
    suffering to understanding dying as a normal
    and valuable part of a full and healthy life a
    time of opportunity for growth, enhanced meaning
    and a sense of completion
  • To achieve this professionals have to be trained
    in working with the concepts redirecting f hope,
    meaning making as part of end of life care

11
2 Roads to death
THE DIFFICULT ROAD
Confused
Tremulous
Restless
Hallucinations
Normal
Mumbling Delirium
Sleepy
Myoclonic Jerks
Lethargic
Seizures
Obtunded
THE USUAL ROAD
Semicomatose
Comatose
Death
12
Fixed characteristics of the patient
Diagnosis, prognosis
Race, ethnicityand culture
Religion
Socioeconomicclass
13
Modifiable dimensions
Spiritual, cultural,existential beliefs
Economicdemands
Physical symptoms
Patient
Caregivingneeds
Hopes,expectations
Social relationships, support
Psychological, cognitive symptoms
14
Health system interventions
Community
Institutions
Family /friends
Health professionals
Patient
15
Patient
Utilization
Pain /symptom relief
Qualityof life
Satisfaction
Outcomes
16
5 steps for successful advance care planning
  • Introduce the topic
  • Engage in structured discussions
  • Document patient preferences
  • Review, update
  • Apply directives when need arises

17
The Patients story as part of assessing
suffering
  • Hearing the narrative of what the suffering is
    about.
  • Hear the language that is used .
  • Hear the metaphors patients use to describe their
    pain and sense of loss .
  • Listen for
  • Physical pain
  • Psychological pain
  • Spiritual pain
  • Allowing a process of validation and ascribing
    meaning to their experience assist in creating
    meaning threw the suffering

18
Meaning of illness
  • Fears concerns
  • Illness
  • Death dying
  • Changes and losses
  • Family / self / role
  • Control

19
Emotional responses to illness
  • Avoidance, denial
  • Fear, anger
  • Lability, irritability
  • Intellectualization
  • Grief
  • Acceptance, spiritual peace

20
Fears
  • Loss of control, dignity
  • Loss of relationships
  • Being a burden
  • Physical suffering

21
Elicit the patients values and goals
  • Ask about past experiences
  • Describe possible situations
  • Write a letter

22
Common pitfalls
  • Failure to plan
  • Proxy absent for discussions
  • Unclear patient preferences
  • Focus too narrow
  • Communicative patients are ignored
  • Making assumptions

23
. . . Preparation for last hours of life
  • Educating / training patients, families and
    caregivers
  • communication
  • tasks of caring
  • what to expect
  • physiologic changes, events
  • symptom management
  • Advance planning
  • personal choices
  • caregivers
  • setting
  • Loss, grief, coping strategies

24
Choice of caregivers
  • Be family first, caregivers only if comfortable
  • everyone comfortable in the role
  • seek permission
  • change roles if stressed

25
Choice of setting . . .
  • Burdens, benefits weighed
  • Minimize family burden
  • risk to career, personal economics, health
  • ghosts
  • Permit family presence
  • privacy
  • intimacy

Alternate setting as backup
26
Anticipatoryplanning for death
  • Current losses
  • Anticipated losses
  • Advance care planning
  • Advance planning for last hours and after death

27
Elicit the patients values and goals
  • Ask about past experiences
  • Describe possible situations
  • Write a letter

28
Preparation for the last hours of life . . .
  • Advance planning
  • personal choices
  • caregivers
  • setting
  • Loss, grief, coping strategies

29
Advance practical planning . . .
  • Financial, legal affairs
  • Final gifts
  • bequests
  • organ donation
  • Autopsy
  • Burial / cremation
  • Funeral / memorial services
  • Guardianship

30
Choice of caregivers
  • Be family first, caregivers only if comfortable
  • everyone comfortable in the role
  • seek permission
  • change roles if stressed

31
. . .Choice of setting
  • Burdens, benefits weighed
  • Permit family presence
  • privacy
  • intimacy
  • Minimize family burden
  • risk to career, personal economics, health
  • ghosts
  • Alternate setting as backup

32
. . . Preparation for last hours of life
  • Educating / training patients, families and
    caregivers
  • communication
  • tasks of caring
  • what to expect
  • physiologic changes, events
  • symptom management

33
. . . Teamwork
  • Teamwork usually includes
  • physicians
  • nurses
  • social workers
  • chaplains
  • others
  • Hospice philosophy can be integrated into
    mainstream practice
  • The whole person goes through the dying process,
    not just his / her physiology
  • No one person can meet all the needs

34
Barriers
  • Institutional
  • Regulations
  • Reimbursement
  • Attitudes

35
Families . . .
  • How we die is an important personal legacy
  • Dying well often demands
  • the chance to be close to family, friends
  • family / proxy assistance with decisions
  • good communication

36
Redirection of Hope
  • Alternatives to Hope for Cure
  • Hope for symptom control
  • Hope for quality of life until death
  • Hope for a dignified death
  • Hope for sustained meaning
  • Hope for reconciliation
  • Hope for forgiveness
  • Hope for a legacy
  • Task of the patient at end of Life
  • Sense of completion of worldly affairs
  • Sense of completion of relationships with family
    and friend
  • Sense of meaning about ones life
  • Experience love of self and others
  • Acceptance of finality of life and ones
    existence as an individual
  • Surrender to the unknown-
  • letting Go

37
Tasks for relationship Completion
  • Expression of regret
  • Expression of Forgiveness
  • Acceptance of gratitude and appreciation
  • Leave taking

38
What we need to say before we die
  • I forgive you
  • Please forgive me
  • I love you
  • Thank you for loving me
  • Goodbye

39
Dignity Psychotherapy Model / QuestionDignity
is in the eye of the Beholder By Havey Max
Chochinov
  • Protocol
  • Tell me a little about your life history the
    parts that you either remember most important?
  • When did you feel most alive?
  • Are there specific things that you would want
    your family to know about you, and are there
    particular things you would want them to
    remember?
  • What are the most important accomplishments, and
    what do you feel most proud of?
  • Are there particular things that you feel still
    need to be said to your loved ones or things that
    you would want to take the time to say once
    again?
  • What are your hopes and dreams for your loved
    ones?
  • What have you learned about life that you would
    want to pass along to others?
  • What advice or words of guidance would you wish
    to pass along to your (son, daughter, husband,
    wife, parents, others?
  • Are there words or perhaps even instructions that
    you would like to offer your family to help
    prepare them for the future?
  • In creating this permanent record, are there
    other things that you would like to include?

40
Havey Max Chochinov et al Dignity therapy model
Havey Max Chochinov et al Dignity therapy model
41
Dignity categories/ themes
From Dignity is in the eye of the Beholder By
Havey Max Chochinov
42
William BreitbartGroup work program Meaning
Centered Psychotherapy A spiritual intervention
for Loss of Meaning and Hopelessness
  • 8 session group work model
  • Concepts of Meaning
  • Cancer and Meaning
  • Meaning in the Historical Context of Life
  • Legacy project
  • Meaning and Attitudinal Values Limitations,
    finiteness life
  • Meaning and creativity responsibility , deeds
  • Meaning Experience (Nature,Art, Humor)
  • Termination, Goodbyes Hope for the future

43
Resources and Acknowledgments
1
2
Dignity is in the eye of the Beholder By Havey
Max Chochinov
3. Reframing Hope Meaning - Centered
care for patients near the end of Life By
William Breitbart
4
Palliative Care The Basics for Psycho-oncologist
William Breitbart Steven Passik
Communicating with Realism and Hope Incurable
cancer patient's Views on Disclosure of
prognosis.
5
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