Among the growing number of tools and resources aiding consumers to "age in place" is "pre-hospice." Kaiser Health News recently published an encouraging article, Pre-Hospice" Saves Money By Keeping People At Home Near The End Of Life, that well explains the concept and its promise.
The article first discusses the practical impediments consumers face in an effort to age in place:
"Most aging people would choose to stay home in their last years of life. But for many, it doesn’t work out: They go in and out of hospitals, getting treated for flare-ups of various chronic illnesses. It’s a massive problem that costs the health care system billions of dollars and has galvanized health providers, hospital administrators and policymakers to search for solutions."
According to the article, Sharp HealthCare, a San Diego health system, devised the pre-hospice program called Transitions as a way to fulfill patients' desire to stay home, keep them out of the hospital, provide necessary care in their home, and reduce the costs of care. Social workers and nurses from Sharp regularly visit patients in their homes to explain what they can expect in their final years, help them make end-of-life plans, and teach them how to better manage their conditions, illnesses, and diseases. Physicians track their health, and eliminate unnecessary medications and treatments. Unlike hospice care, patients don’t need to have a prognosis of six months or less to live, and they receiving curative treatment for their illnesses - not just relief from symptoms.
Transitions was among the first of its kind, but now there are several such "home-based palliative care" programs around the country. They are part of a broader push to improve people’s health and reduce spending through better coordination of care and more treatment outside of hospitals. Palliative care focuses on relieving patients’ stress and pain as their health declines, and aims to maintain quality of life. For people with serious illnesses, such as cancer, dementia, and pulmonary and heart failure, the plan is to provide patients palliative care and then transition naturally to hospice care when necessary. The 2014 report “Dying in America,” by the Institute of Medicine, recommended that all people with serious advanced illness have access to palliative care.
Transitions is one of the many good ideas that has come from Kaiser Permanente. Nearly 20 years ago, Kaiser created a home-based palliative care program in California and later in Hawaii and Colorado. Studies by Kaiser and others found that participants were far more likely to be satisfied with their care and more likely to die at home than those not in the program. One of the studies found that 36 percent of people receiving palliative care at home were hospitalized in their final months of life, compared with 59 percent of those getting standard care. The overall cost of care for those who participated in the program was a third less than for those who didn’t. A more recent study confirms these conclusions.
The article also discusses that although the need for such services is increasing, "not enough trained providers are available. And some doctors are unfamiliar with the approach, and patients may be reluctant, especially those who haven’t clearly been told they have a terminal diagnosis."
Of course hanging over ever the entire health care industry is what becomes of the Affordable Care Act. The Affordable Care Act established new rules and pilot programs that reward the quality rather than the quantity of care, such as “accountable care organizations,” networks of doctors and hospitals that share responsibility for providing care to patients. These organizations also share the savings when they rein in unnecessary spending by keeping people healthier. Innovations such as these are helping to make pre-hospice and home-based palliative care a more viable option.
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