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Providing Quality EndofLife Care Hospice Care in Assisted Living

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Mary Stack, MSW - Coordinator, Senior Living Communities. Detrie ... At the end of this session you will: Understand what hospice is (eligibility requirements, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Providing Quality EndofLife Care Hospice Care in Assisted Living


1
Providing Quality End-of-Life CareHospice Care
in Assisted Living
  • Georgia Association of Homes and Services
  • for the Aging
  • Assisted Living Symposium
  • February 22, 2008
  • Visiting Nurse Hospice Atlanta
  • Mary Stack, MSW - Coordinator, Senior Living
    Communities
  • Detrie Bell, RN - Clinical Manager
  • Mary Arthur, MSW - Director, Senior Living
    Initiatives

2
Objectives
  • At the end of this session you will
  • Understand what hospice is (eligibility
    requirements, philosophy and practice)
  • Understand levels of hospice care and payor
    sources
  • Determine how partnering with a hospice
    organization(s) could benefit your community
  • Know how to incorporate hospice care and services
    successfully in your community

3
  • Your experience with hospice care?

4
Hospice 101 Eligibility, Philosophy and Practice
  • Expected length of life is 6 months or less, if
    disease runs its normal course
  • Wide range of diagnoses are included in
    eligibility
  • Resident (or representative, when necessary) and
    the patients physician must be emotionally ready
    to receive hospice care and services
  • Resident care goals are focused on palliative
    care, not curative care (strong clinical emphasis
    on pain and symptom management, comfort, resident
    autonomy)
  • Philosophy of dying gracefully

5
Hospice 101 (continued)
  • Medical care requirements
  • Because hospice is a skilled service, physician
    order is required
  • Certification of terminal status must be signed
    by residents attending physician and hospice
    Medical Director
  • Residents attending physician must be willing to
    work with hospice interdisciplinary care team or
    request Hospice Medical Director to assume care
  • Interdisciplinary hospice care team
  • Nursing (RN, LPN, CNA)
  • Medical Social Work (LCSW, LMSW, MSW)
  • Physician
  • Pastoral Care (Chaplains)
  • Rehabilitation (physical, occupational and speech
    therapists)
  • Volunteers
  • Bereavement Services
  • Resident and family/friends
  • Senior living community staff

6
Hospice 101 (continued)
  • Hospice care is provided to residents in their
    home, whenever possible
  • To receive hospice services, resident must ELECT
    the hospice benefit, thereby waiving other
    medical and health care services specifically for
    the terminal illness
  • Resident can revoke hospice services at any time

7
RegulationsFour Levels of Hospice Care
  • Routine (average Length of stay 39 days)
  • General inpatient (average Length of stay13
    days)
  • Respite (up to 5 days in acute care hospice
    facility)
  • Continuous care (short-term crisis intervention
    in residents/patients apartment maximum _at_ 3
    days)

8
Hospice Payor Sources
  • Medicare
  • Medicaid
  • VA
  • Commercial insurance (e.g. Kaiser, BC/BS, Aetna,
    United)
  • Self-pay

9
How Does Payment Work?
  • Routine, respite and inpatient levels of care
    per diem rate
  • Covers hospice interdisciplinary staff,
    medications related to terminal diagnosis,
    medical supplies, medical equipment, on-call
    staff (24/7), telephone support, transportation
    to/from inpatient hospice center
  • Special Note All expenses related to terminal
    diagnosis must be approved by the hospice team
    (see next slide)
  • Continuous care hourly rate
  • Paid only if at least 8 hours of care in the 24
    hour period are provided and if at least 1 hour
    is from an RN, and if _at_ least 50 of time is
    provided by a licensed nurse
  • Most hospice organizations do not accept patients
    with commercial insurance
  • Commercial payors do not always contract to pay
    for all levels of care
  • Commercial pay rates vary often significantly
    less than Medicare and Medicaid

10
Hospice ELECTED BenefitPayment Considerations
  • Per diem rate must cover all services specific to
  • terminal diagnosis
  • Emergency room visits
  • Medications not related to diagnosis
  • Aggressive medical treatments
  • DME (e.g. electric wheelchair)
  • Palliative care treatments
  • 911 emergency calls
  • Resident (patient), family, and staff education
    regarding end-of-life care and options extremely
    important
  • Resident (patient) and family maintain right to
    choose services preferred

11
Partnering to Provide Hospice Care
  • Essential Components for Partnership
  • Understanding hospice and assisted living
    eligibility criteria
  • Understanding where AL and Hospice integrate and
    separate
  • Written agreement between senior living community
    and hospice organization that defines operational
    expectations (see next slide)
  • Specialized training for hospice and assisted
    living
  • Staff
  • Residents
  • Families/Friends

12
Operational Considerations
  • Defining clear expectations
  • Communication (frequency and methods)
  • Residents, families, AL staff and hospice staff
  • Physician communication between patient/resident,
    attending physician and hospice medical director
  • Care Planning
  • Attendance at joint care planning meetings
  • Development of a coordinated individual plan of
    care (IPOC)
  • Customer Service
  • Other

13
Benefits of Hospice CareAssisted Living and
Personal Care Communities
  • Resource and support to staff, residents and
    families regarding end of life care (philosophy
    and practice)
  • Promotes self-determined life closure based on
    resident preference
  • Provide education palliative vs. curative care,
    medication management, comfort, dying gracefully
  • Reduces physician office visits, emergency room
    visits and hospitalizations
  • Evidence-based research indicates that quality of
    life is enhanced when people receive hospice care
  • Number one resident preference staying in their
    home
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