| Literature DB >> 32762477 |
Katherine C Ritchey1,2, Alice Foy1, Erin McArdel3, David A Gruenewald1,2.
Abstract
Telemedicine technology has become essential to healthcare delivery in the COVID-19 era, but concerns remain regarding whether the intimacy and communication that is central to high-quality palliative care will be compromised by the use of this technology. We employed a business model approach to identify the need for system innovation in palliative care, and a quality improvement approach to structure the project. Products from this project included a standard operating procedure for safe use of tablet computers for inpatient palliative care consultations and family visitations; tablet procurement with installation of video telehealth software; and training and education for clinical staff and other stakeholders. We describe a case illustrating the successful use of palliative care telehealth in the care of a COVID-19-positive patient at the end of life. Successful use of video telehealth for palliative care involved overcoming inertia to the development of telehealth infrastructure and learning clinical video telehealth skills; and engaging front-line care staff and family members who were open to a trial of telehealth for communication. Information gleaned from family about the patient as a person helped bedside staff to tailor care toward aspects meaningful to the patient and family and informed best practices to incorporate intimacy into future palliative video consultations and family visit.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; end of life; geriatrics; telemedicine; veteran
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32762477 PMCID: PMC7488822 DOI: 10.1177/1049909120948235
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hosp Palliat Care ISSN: 1049-9091 Impact factor: 2.500
Framework for Quality Improvement Project.
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Identify the problem |
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Convene workgroup |
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Define the challenge – baseline status, barriers, facilitators |
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Analyze the problem What needs to change? clinical practice/system design/work processes; education/training to support new practices; documentation |
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Develop Action Plan – specific objectives and assignments |
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Implement Action Plan in a test case |
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Evaluate and feedback progress |
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Modify/extend initial Action Plan as needed |
Change Management Stages, Actions and Pitfalls.[25]
| Stage | Examples from our experience with integrating tablets into palliative care |
|---|---|
| Establish a sense of urgency | Sense of urgency ensured by pandemic, and acknowledged need to prioritize telehealth for clinical care across the healthcare system |
| Form a powerful guiding coalition | Collaboration with Acute Care Committee and building on long-standing relationships and alliances with medical ward leadership |
| Create a vision | Need identified from initial review of literature, social media, etc. Brainstorming on uses of tablets, not only for outpatient and home care but also for inpatients and family visitation |
| Communicate the vision | Stakeholder buy-in elicited in committee meetings and individual outreach |
| Empower others to act on the vision | Identified a common goal that motivated participants to persevere. Leveraged climate of “get things done quickly” during pandemic, and loosening of restrictions on use of communications platforms such as FaceTime for duration of crisis |
| Plan for and create short-term wins | Completed successful test calls and encounters with patient-owned devices; completed an encounter with team tablet after SOP approval |
| Consolidate improvements and produce more change | Create and update a step-by-step guide for video chats; incorporate telehealth encounters as part of provider pay for performance and PCT SMART Goal for FY 2020 |
| Institutionalize new approaches | SOP is on the facility SharePoint website; |
Abbreviations:
SMART – specific, measurable, attainable, relevant, time-bound.
SOP – standard operating procedure.
PCT – palliative care team.
FY – fiscal year.
Humanizing Technology for Communication Near the End of Life.
| Elements | Specific Steps/Examples |
|---|---|
| Prepare family prior to the conference with what they may see | If patient is sedated and unconscious, describe the comfort measures provided and how symptoms are being addressed |
| Provide regular reassurance and check-ins | Name everyone in the room and how they are connected to the patient |
| Discuss the “pitfalls of technology” | Set expectations about quality of video/sound/etc. |
| Consider elements of physical and human contact with front line staff | Sing favorite songs |
Initial Task List.
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Discuss with local telehealth champions and obtain examples of best practices for use of tablets for clinical patient care |
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Ensure PCT members have received clinical video telehealth training |
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Obtain tablet computers |
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Set up tablets with audio/video communication software |
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Perform trial to establish communication link between tablets on facility wi-fi network |
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Develop SOP based on current best practices and submit to facility for approval |
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Provide training and education for clinical staff to use tablets according to the SOP |
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Identify plan for storage and tracking use of tablets as part of SOP |
Take Home Messages.
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The technology is imperfect; have a backup plan (probably the telephone) |
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Video connections will not work well for everyone; be prepared to accept that not everyone’s needs will be fully met. Most people will appreciate that you tried |
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“Don’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good” |
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Be flexible, creative and use the tools that are available: if you cannot get tablets, phones in every room are better than nothing. Other alternatives: Vocera devices; baby monitors; their personal smart phones to establish a connection |
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When starting a palliative care telehealth project, develop a business plan and use a rapid-cycle quality improvement approach |
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Do not wait for someone else to get things started. Start small, but do start |