This presentation provides an overview of hospice and palliative care. It defines hospice care as support for those in the last phases of life-limiting illness that focuses on quality of life. An interdisciplinary team provides services like pain management, emotional support, and caregiver training. Palliative care also focuses on comfort but may be provided alongside curative treatment. The presentation outlines services offered by hospices, who pays for care, and admission criteria for hospice care.
Our goal is to cover the wide areas of overlap and similarities between the two disciplines, and to also make the differences between the two clearer for you.
I will be giving this presentation to the Richardson Center in Commerce Twp, on May 6th.. I am available to present this information or other presentations to senior communities.
Our goal is to cover the wide areas of overlap and similarities between the two disciplines, and to also make the differences between the two clearer for you.
I will be giving this presentation to the Richardson Center in Commerce Twp, on May 6th.. I am available to present this information or other presentations to senior communities.
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currently we need to understand the role of palliative care in our patients. kapkatet hospital have strongly participated in provision of palliative services. come and witness the strong team willing to help the community.
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The goal of this webinar was to educate healthcare professionals about the differences between palliative and curative care while exploring the history and philosophy of the hospice movement.
The goal of this webinar was to help hospice and healthcare professionals understand the ethics and application of artificial nutrition and hydration (ANH) for patients near the end of life.
2018: Understanding hospice and palliative as distinct medical services revis...SDGWEP
Understanding Hospice and Palliative Care as Distinct Medical services, by Catrisha Cabanilla-Del Mundo (Medical Director at NAH), as presented from the 2018 GWEP January Symposium.
Hospice care focuses on the palliation of a terminal patient's pain and symptoms and attending to their emotional and spiritual needs at the end of life. Hospice care prioritizes comfort and quality of life by reducing pain and suffering.
Ethics at the End of Life and Introduction to Hospice and Palliative Care for Medical Students. Exploration of feeding tubes, code status, when to stop chemo. Discusses cases and the ethical principles and values that are the basis for disagreement in care and what to do when there is a conflict in ethical principles themselves. Also provides an introduction to decisions of last resort including physician aid in dying, palliative sedation and voluntary refusal of nutrition and hydration.
The who, what, where, why and how of end-of-life care. A continuing education webinar presented by VITAS Healthcare on March 15, 2018. For more information or future webinars, please visit: https://www.vitas.com/partners/continuing-education
palliative care presented by sambu cheruiyot clinical nutritionist in kapkate...cheruiyot sambu
currently we need to understand the role of palliative care in our patients. kapkatet hospital have strongly participated in provision of palliative services. come and witness the strong team willing to help the community.
Palliative Care vs. Curative Care - December 2023VITASAuthor
The goal of this webinar was to educate healthcare professionals about the differences between palliative and curative care while exploring the history and philosophy of the hospice movement.
The goal of this webinar was to help hospice and healthcare professionals understand the ethics and application of artificial nutrition and hydration (ANH) for patients near the end of life.
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For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
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http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...
Understanding_Hospice-Palliative-Care_update.pptx
1. PowerPoint Template
Understanding Hospice and
Palliative Care
• This presentation is intended as a template.
• Modify and/or delete slides as appropriate for your organization and
community.
• Delete this slide before use.
• To view speaker notes and edit presentation, click 'Edit', then 'Edit
slides.’
Add your organization’s name & contact info – and your logo if you like.
5. Hospice Care
• Provides support and care
for those in the last phases
of life-limiting illness.
• Recognizes dying as part of
the normal process of living.
• Affirms life and neither
hastens nor postpones
death.
• Focuses on quality of life for
individuals and their family
caregivers.
6. Core Aspects
of Hospice
Care
• Person- and family-
centered
• Interdisciplinary team care
• Provides a range of
services:
• Interdisciplinary case
management
• Pharmaceuticals
• Durable medical equipment
• Supplies
• Volunteers
• Grief support
7. Additional
Services
Hospices offer additional
services, including:
• Hospice residential care
(facility)
• Inpatient hospice care
• Complementary therapies
• Specialized pediatric team
• Caregiver training
• Community bereavement
services
9. Work of the
Hospice Team
• Develops the plan of care
• Manages pain and symptoms
• Attends to the emotional,
psychosocial and spiritual
aspects of dying and
caregiving
• Teaches the family how to
provide care
• Advocates for the patient and
family
• Provides bereavement care
and counseling
10. Where is
Hospice
Provided?
• Home – the patient’s or
loved one’s home
• Nursing Facility
• Assisted Living Facility
• Hospital
• Hospice residence or unit
• Correctional setting,
homeless shelter –
wherever the person is
located
11. Who Pays?
• Medicare
• Medicaid
• Insurance and HMOs
• Private pay
• Sometimes a combination
of these…
12. Admission
Criteria
To qualify for hospice care,
these are the general
requirements:
• Life-limiting illness,
prognosis is 6 months or
less if the disease takes
normal course
• Live in the service area
• Consent to accept services
• Forgo other medical
interventions for the
terminal illness
14. What is
Palliative
Care?
• Treatment that enhances
comfort and improves the
quality of an individual’s life
who is facing a serious
illness but may not quality
for hospice care.
• The expected outcome is
relief from distressing
symptoms, the easing of
pain, and/or enhancing the
quality of life.
15. Kinds of Care
Curative Care:
• Focuses on a cure to an
illness and the prolonging of
life.
Palliative Care:
• Focuses on comfort and
quality of life that may be
provided with other
treatments.
Hospice Care:
• Focuses on comfort and
quality of life when a cure is
not possible with specialize
care and services.
16. Services that
We Offer the
Community
[Outline that services and
programs that you
organization make available…]
18. Online
Resources
National Hospice and
Palliative Care Organization’s
CaringInfo website offers
some useful resources with
free materials.
• www.CaringInfo.org – with
information and tools to
help people facing serious
illness, including help with
advance care planning,
caregiving, and grief.
Research from the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization and National Hospice Foundation.
As defined by Medicare Hospice Benefit.
Not all programs offer these – based on needs in community, mission, resources, skills
Palliative care programs may not include all these disciplines as palliative care is not regulated by Medicare Hospice Benefit Conditions of Participation.
These are primary services offered by hospice. Not all patients/families avail themselves of these services.
Develops the plan of care with the family
Manages pain and symptoms
Attends to the emotional, psychosocial and spiritual aspects of dying and caregiving
Teaches the family how to provide care
Advocates for care needs of patient and family
Provides bereavement care and counseling to surviving family and friends.
Hospice care may be delivered across all care settings.
Some think of palliative care as hospice that isn’t defined by the 6 month hospice benefit. It’s important to understand the subtle differences between palliative care and hospice.
Most hospices were “designed” based on the HMB model. That model limits admission to hospice to those with 6 mo prognosis and the discontinuation of “curative” treatments. Palliative care doesn’t have those limitations. Palliative care programs don’t have to provide the same range of core services – IDT, bereavement, spiritual, social work, patient/family, etc. We’ll talk more about this as we explore the hospice model.
All hospice is palliative, all palliative isn’t hospice and doesn’t have to provide same range of services.
When a patient’s disease process is no longer curable or reversible, aggressive curative treatment begins to be less appropriate and may be considered harmful.
Hospice philosophy emphasizes palliative care, which can be as aggressive as curative care, with a
focus on comfort, quality of life, and patient-/family-directed care that promotes the patient’s right to
self-determination and decision-making.
Curative care: Focuses on quantity of life and prolonging of life.
Curative care can actually cause more suffering when cure is no longer possible and treatments and procedures needlessly extend the period of suffering.
Quality of life is often elusive if a patient is subjected to treatments and interventions that he/she did not choose, such as respirators, intravenous infusion and tube feedings.
Within the hospice philosophy, patients are encouraged to complete advance directives. patients’ choices regarding resuscitation measures and curative treatments are respected and honored by hospice.
Palliative care: Focuses on quality of life and death, and views death as a natural part of life.
Palliative care is a lessening and relief of physical, psychosocial and spiritual suffering so that the patient can accomplish his/her goals and life-closure tasks.
Closure tasks may include saying goodbye, letting go, finding meaning and value in life and death, and mending relationships.
Control and management of physical, emotional, psychosocial and spiritual pain and suffering and other end-of-life issues are paramount.
Determining specific things that bring quality of life to each patient
Hospice care: The most intensive comfort care available that focuses on quality of life; generally intended for the final months of life when a patient with a terminal illness decides to forgo other treatments for that disease.
Questions?