Addressing Palliative Care Needs of COVID-19 Patients in New Orleans, LA: A Team-Based Reflective Analysis.

Palliat Med Rep

Section of Geriatrics and Extended Care, Southeast Louisiana Veterans Health Care System (SLVHCS), New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.

Published: July 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • New Orleans experienced a significant rise in COVID-19 cases from March to May 2020, prompting the need for effective palliative care protocols due to the increased demand.
  • A structured, team-based protocol was developed to categorize ICU admissions based on severity, facilitating collaboration among healthcare providers and enhancing communication with patients and families.
  • Analysis showed that standardizing palliative care consultations led to higher rates of life-sustaining treatment document completions, family communications, and goals-of-care discussions, ultimately easing the burden on ICU staff during the pandemic.

Article Abstract

New Orleans, Louisiana served as a central location for a surge of novel coronavirus cases during the months of March 2020 to May 2020. To provide guidance to palliative care teams naive to the palliative care demand associated with a surge of coronavirus cases, we document our protocol to best optimize palliative care resources. This report aims to present this information and reflect upon what was most beneficial/least beneficial to serve as a roadmap for palliative teams facing this pandemic. To pilot a team-based structured protocol to categorize severity of COVID-19 intensive care unit (ICU) admissions and subsequently collaborate with the palliative interdisciplinary team to assess physical, spiritual, and psychosocial needs. New ICU consults were categorized into color-coded clinical severity "pots" during daily ICU interdisciplinary rounds. Clinical decision making and communication with patient/next of kin were based on "pot" classification. Palliative medicine consults were placed on all COVID-19 positive patients admitted to the ICU between March 29, 2020, and May 1, 2020. A retrospective chart review was performed to analyze the effect of palliative care consultation on completion of goals-of-care conversations and the life-sustaining treatment (LST) document, an advance directive form specific to the Veterans Affairs hospital system between March 29, 2020 and May 1, 2020. Of the palliative consults evaluated by a palliative provider, 74% resulted in completion of a LST document, 58% resulted in video contact with family members, and 100% incorporated a goals-of-care discussion. We found that standardizing palliative care consultation on all COVID-19 positive ICU admissions subjectively alleviated the burden on ICU providers and staff in the midst of a crisis, resulted in increased documentation of patient goals-of-care preferences/LSTs, facilitated clinical updates to family members, and better distributed clinical burden among palliative team members.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7446248PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/pmr.2020.0057DOI Listing

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