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PALLIATIVE CARE 101
DO’S, DON’TS AND
CONSULTS
James Hallenbeck, MD
Director, Palliative Care Services
VA Palo Alto
Agenda
Palliative and Hospice Care –definitions
 Palliative Care in the VA
 Do’s and Don’ts of Palliative Care
 Palliative Care Consults

Hospice and Palliative Care – not
the same thing…
Hospice –overtly focused on care for the
dying
 A place, an organization, a philosophy
 Palliative Care –
 Definition: “Care focused on the misery
of illness”

Annual Veteran Deaths
A small percentage of veterans die as
inpatients in VA facilities
Palliative Care at VA Palo Alto
HCS




1979 – Menlo Park Hospice opens (one of the first
publicly funded hospice in the country)
1994 –1999
 Expansion from 7 to 25 beds
 1999 Moved to 2C, began non-vet admits
2000 Palliative Care fellowship and consult
service started
2002 Palliative Medicine Clinic started
10

DON’T forget the bowels, when prescribing
opioids

DO use promotility agents such as senna
proactively
 DSS, stool softeners usually inadequate
9

DON’T use the O2 sat meter to evaluate
dyspnea

DO ask if patients are short of breath and
treat accordingly
8
DON’T use Phenergan and Compazine
interchangeably
 These agents opposites in action:
Phenergan antihistimine/anticholinergic,
Compazine antidopaminergic
 DO use Compazine as suppository of
choice in opioid related nausea

7

DON’T prescribe opioids (or any drug with
potentially serious side-effects) with wide
dose ranges such as 2-10 mg morphine q 20
minutes

DO check to see that any drug is safe across
the dose range you prescribe
6
DON’T prescribe Ativan (lorazepam) as a
sole agent for nausea
 Ativan only helpful if anticipatory nausea
or anxiety associated with nausea
 DO try to figure out why the patient is
nauseated, what receptors are involved and
treat accordingly

5

DON’T just think about differential
diagnosis relative to disease

DO consider that differential diagnosis can
apply to symptoms. Why is a particular
disease causing this symptom? What is the
physiology of the symptom?
4
DON’T use only short-acting agents
(opioids) for chronic pain
 Special concern re combo drugs –
Vicodin, T&C #3 and Percocet
 DO use sustained-release or long acting
opioids, if indicated, for chronic pain

3

DON’T just tell patients what is wrong with
them

DO elicit patients’ understandings of their
illness by asking questions like, “What is
your understanding of why you are sick?’
2

DON’T just tell people what you are not
going to do.
 Nobody loves you for what you don’t do

DO tell them what you are going to do (or
how you will help them)
 Especially important when discussing
“treatment withdrawal”
1
DON’T set out to “get the DNR”
 Resuscitation status is only one of many
“difficult decisions” that should
incorporate patient and family goals
 DO assess and document patients’ goals of
care

Palliative Care Consults

Help with:
 Difficult decisions
 Communication
 Symptom management
 Identifying appropriate venues of care for
patients with serious, life-limiting
illnesses
Palliative Care Consults
What they are not
A excuse for ward teams not to talk with
patients about difficult subjects
 Shock troops to break through
patient/family denial, thereby “getting” the
DNR
 Solely about hospice referral as a
“placement” issue

How you can help with Palliative
Care Consults
Be as clear as you can as to what help you
would like
 At least try to address patient/family goals
of care and document prior to consult
 If you have special concerns you would
rather not put in the consult request in GUI,
call the consult fellow, beeper: 21656
