dinsdag 7 september 2010

Nationaal Congres
Palliatieve Zorg
22-24 september 2010

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Plenaire sessies
  

Alle plenaire sessies

Op donderdag 13 november en vrijdag 14 november zullen de respectievelijk dr. Frank Ferris en Mrs. Conny Dahlin NP als keynote sprekers een plenaire voordracht verzorgen.

  

Palliative care Standards and Outcome Measures

Datum 13 november 2008
Tijd 09.00 - 09.50 uur
Soort Plenaire sessie
Zaal EUROPA
Voorzitter Dhr. Frank D. Ferris, MD 
Director International Programs, 
Institute for Palliative Medicine at San Diego Hospital

 

Palliative care Standards and Outcome Measures

Quality palliative care is of interest to everyone who is receiving or providing care. The quality of the care that is provided depends on everyone’s understanding of the underlying model that is guiding patient/family care; the organization’s mission and vision; and the consistency of the language, practice and treatment guidelines, outcome assessment and performance improvement strategies that everyone is using from day-to-day. Implementation of quality palliative care within an organization starts with careful strategic planning followed by the systematic development of standards, guidelines, outcome measures, and a performance improvement process through an inclusive consensus-building process. By modifying existing widely-accepted models, organizations can expedite their implementation of quality palliative care. Through careful attention to evolving this process over time, everyone will be the benefactors of a high-quality palliative care experience. 

 

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Conny Dahlin NP

Datum 14 november 2008
Tijd 09.00 - 09.50 uur
Soort Plenaire sessie
Zaal EUROPA
Voorzitter Conny Dahlin, APRN, BC, ACHPN
Clinical Director Massachusetts General Hospital Palliative Care Service
Boston, MA

 

Collaborative Practice: A Vital Force in Palliative Care

Within palliative care, there are many dimensions of care surrounding the patient and family. These include physical, intellectual, emotional, social, and spiritual aspects of care. No one health care provider can attend to all these dimensions and thus a collaborative approach is the cornerstone of a palliative care team. But what does collaboration truly mean and how is it best implemented?

Collaboration means to work together or similarly to cooperate together. More simply put, the team must work together towards a common goal. The goal is a plan of care based on the patient’s values, preferences, beliefs and culture. The National Consensus Project Clinical Guidelines for Quality Palliative Care outlines basic assumptions for good collaborative care. First it makes the assumptions of an interdisciplinary team, its composition and its goals. The Guidelines state: Palliative care presupposes indications for, and provision of, interdisciplinary team evaluation and treatment in selected cases. The palliative care team must be skilled in care of the patient population to be served. Palliative care teams may be expanded to include a range of professionals, based on the services needed. They include a core group of professionals from medicine, nursing and social work, and may include some combination of volunteer coordinators, bereavement coordinators, chaplains, psychologists, pharmacists, nursing assistants and home attendants, dietitians, physical-, occupational-, art-, play-, music-, and child-life-therapists, case managers and trained volunteers.

Moreover, good collaboration results in care across the health care spectrum. Specifically, genuine coordination of care across settings is ensured through regular and high-quality communication between providers at times of transition or changing needs, and through effective continuity of care and case management.

In the United States, collaborative practice is very different in a hospice setting and the palliative care setting. Since hospice is defined by federal guidelines of the United States Government, hospice care focuses on care in the home during the last six months of life, Since in the 1970s, hospice was championed in the United States by the nursing pioneer Florence Wald, hospice is nurse driven. Palliative care tends to be more hospital based and therefore is more physician driven. Thus, collaboration looks different in these two settings. Nonetheless, there are some common strategies to collaboration. This session will explore those strategies.

 

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Legenda

Plenaire sessies
Themasessies
Meet-the-experts
Vrije presentaties
Workshops