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Development of a Palliative Care Toolkit for the COVID-19 Pandemic

Authors :
Samantha L. Gelfand
Rintaro Sato
James A. Tulsky
Lucinda Lai
Lauren Greco
Jane deLima Thomas
Kate Sciacca
Lorie Smith
Stephanie Kiser
Janet L. Abrahm
Kathleen A. Lee
Richard E. Leiter
Barbara Reville
Andrew J. Lawton
Haipeng Zhang
Mihir Kamdar
Jaclyn C. Shameklis
Callie A. Siegert
Source :
Journal of Pain and Symptom Management
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

The Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has led to high numbers of critically ill and dying patients in need of expert management of dyspnea, delirium, and serious illness communication. The rapid spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome-Coronavirus-2 creates surges of infected patients requiring hospitalization and puts palliative care programs at risk of being overwhelmed by patients, families, and clinicians seeking help. In response to this unprecedented need for palliative care, our program sought to create a collection of palliative care resources for nonpalliative care clinicians. A workgroup of interdisciplinary palliative care clinicians developed the Palliative Care Toolkit, consisting of a detailed chapter in a COVID-19 online resource, a mobile and desktop Web application, one-page guides, pocket cards, and communication skills training videos. The suite of resources provides expert and evidence-based guidance on symptom management including dyspnea, pain, and delirium, as well as on serious illness communication, including conversations about goals of care, code status, and end of life. We also created a nurse resource hotline staffed by palliative care nurse practitioners and virtual office hours staffed by a palliative care attending physician. Since its development, the Toolkit has helped us disseminate best practices to nonpalliative care clinicians delivering primary palliative care, allowing our team to focus on the highest-need consults and increasing acceptance of palliative care across hospital settings.

Details

ISSN :
08853924
Volume :
60
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Pain and Symptom Management
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3f407df07b8348892a898ba5bf29a356
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2020.05.021