Showing posts with label palliative care grand rounds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label palliative care grand rounds. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Palliative Care Grand Rounds - May 2011

Hiatus over. Welcome to the May edition of Palliative Care Grand Rounds (PCGR), a monthly (now appearing the second Wednesday of each month) summary, or mash-up, of interesting, thought-provoking, timely, relevant, humane, and exceptionally well-written postings from the blogosphere.
Several topics dominated the news, and thus the blogs, covering palliative care. Prescription opioid abuse is one, and Drew “Feeling Grumpy” Rosielle addressed this subject in his post on the blog Pallimed.

Also, on the 16th of last month bloggers united around the 2011 Blog Rally for National Healthcare Decisions Day (NHDD). Nathan Kottkamp founded NHDD back in 2008 as a nationwide advance care planning awareness initiative. Larry Beresford, accomplished hospice journalist, took up the torch in posting a personal story about completing his own advance directive. In the blog Hospice Doctor, a palliative medicine specialist muses about the decision-making process (for clinicians and family) behind the care of an 88-year woman whose death in a hospital followed 11 days there with considerable (some futile?) treatment.

Which leads me to the third subject in the April palliative care news stream. The Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care has released a new report, "Trends and Variation in End-of-Life Care for Medicare Beneficiaries with Severe Chronic Illness," documenting trends in the care of chronically ill patients in the last six months of life. This report was covered extensively in the mainstream media, less so in the blogosphere. You can check the PBS NewsHour coverage of this story in this post on its blog.
Then see the comments this blogger posted  regarding the huge and persistent variations across hospitals, communities, regions, and states. If you agree that these variations in late-life care practice appear intractable, share with us your thoughts—what do you think can be done?

GeriPal bloggers Drs. Eric Widera and Alex Smith were themselves featured in a New York Times blog post.  Together with colleague Dr. Sei Lee, they are developing a Web site that offers individual prognoses based on 18-20 different geriatric prognostic indices. When you visit the blog post, be sure to spend a few minutes reviewing the comments. Here’s a topic that apparently resonated with many readers.

And speaking of the blog GeriPal, congratulations on being chosen as the Best Clinical Weblog of 2010. In one of its April posts, it looks more closely at the results of a study on nurse practitioner models of palliative care. And Geripal blogger Alex Smith jumped over to another blog, Kevin MD, to comment on
the hospice and palliative care community’s unrelenting yet fruitless search for a simple and consistent message. Speaking about a message that benefits from consistency, and also at the blog KevinMD (its tag line is “social media’s leading physician voice”), a geriatric psychiatry fellow posts that palliative care and medical interventions are not mutually exclusive.

Many thanks to Christian Sinclair for originating Palliative Care Grand Rounds several years ago, and for sustaining it since. But to state the obvious, PCGR’s continued publication depends upon fellow bloggers…like you. Do let Christian know of your interest in adding your incisive post.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Palliative Care Grand Rounds - November MMX

Read here for the November edition of Palliative Care Grand Rounds, a monthly round-up of the best from the blogosphere about late-life care. 

Thursday, September 2, 2010

September Edition of Palliative Care Grand Rounds

Read here for this month's edition of Palliative Care Grand Rounds, hosted by Christian Sinclair. You'll find a wide-ranging mash-up of the best from the blogosphere around palliative care, including discussions and commentary about Atul Gawande’s article in the New Yorker titled ‘Letting Go.‘ and research published in the NEJM demonstrating early palliative care improves quality of life.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Palliative Care Grand Rounds - July MMX

Read here for this month's PCGR, hosted at the GeriPal blog. You'll find an interesting, enlightening, and well-rounded mash-up of the best from the blogosphere.

Monday, June 7, 2010

Palliative Care Grand Rounds- June 2010

Have a look here for this month's round-up of the highlights from the palliative care blogosphere, hosted by Julie Rosen at the blog Bedside Manners.

Friday, May 7, 2010

Palliative Care Grand Rounds - May 2010

Have a look here for the May issue of Palliative Care Grand Rounds, hosted this month by Thaddeus Pope at his blog Medical Futility.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Palliative Care Grand Rounds - April MMX

A grand welcome to the April edition of Palliative Care Grand Rounds (PCGR), a monthly (first Wednesday) summary, or mash-up, of thought-provoking, timely, relevant, humane, and exceptionally well-written postings from the blogosphere. For a look back at year-to-date PCGRs, see here, here, and here. Now, onward.

With the landmark health reform bill commanding news throughout the past month, I’ll focus on blog posts relating to palliative care that any of us might have overlooked. First, a summary of how health reform may impact hospice via Larry Beresford’s post .

A higher than usual volume of current blog postings concern futile care. To wit, the Happy Hospitalist writes in his Unfiltered Hospital Medicine Blog about a recent case that highlights for him, just as for many who posted comments, the ethical issues surrounding futile care. So is this particular case an extreme example? Or is it more common than you or I realize? Decide for yourself.

Meanwhile, a neurologist with the blogger moniker of Dr. Grumpy writes about another example of futile care that’s sure to give pause to each reader.

Then there’s Joanne Kenen, a veteran journalist who logged more than a decade covering health policy on Capitol Hill. As Senior Writer in the Health Policy Program at the New America Foundation, Ms. Kenen’s blog focuses on the intersection between health policy and health politics. Read here for her reaction to an essay “Shock Me, Tube Me, Line Me” penned by an
Emergency Medicine specialist in the esteemed journal Health Affairs. Its author, Boris Veysman, an ER doc at a New Jersey academic medical center, describes caring for a terminally ill woman suffering from metastatic cancer. Her wish—to have a low-tech death, free of tubes and machines—both countered and confirmed his to have “everything” done to prolong life when his time comes. A provocative read.

Larry Beresford, host of last month’s PCGR, posted recently about the discussion circulating more widely these days on declining enrollment at hospices. A decline in hospice referrals, Larry posits, may correlate to what the economists refer to as a necessary market correction.

The critical nexus of death and religion often fascinates Ann Neumann. In her blog Otherspoon, she weighs in with a thoughtful piece on the role that three institutions (church, state, and health care industry) play in the national structure of late-life care.
Concurrently, her post grapples with the racial disparities prevalent in hospice enrollment.

I’m indebted to Christian Sinclair for facilitating my role as Grand Rounds host in his post . It nicely crystallizes several blog posts that have deservedly garnered much attention and discussion.

Dr. Michael Kirsch asks in his blog “Are Feeding Tubes Futile Care or Morally Obligatory?” See where you stand.

A family medicine physician who writes a blog, Musings of a Dinosaur, posted last month that “Palliative Care is an Unnecessary Specialty”. Well, as you’d expect, this view generated considerable discussion throughout the blogosphere. Some came from Buckeye Surgeon, who comments occasionally about palliative care, posting these comments.

On Geripal, Alex Smith writes about how his “What is palliative care?” response has evolved. Today, he starts by saying, "Palliative care is about matching treatment to patient goals." Hard to argue with that.

Are you curious how physicians choose to practice in hospice and palliative medicine? In the first edition of Pallimed’s new feature, Origins, Pam Harris, who recently passed her Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation boards and is HPM-certified, details what drew her to the HPM specialty.

Suzana Makowski joined Pallimed last month as a blogger, posting about emergency room use by patients with cancer approaching end of life. Dr. Makowski adds her suggestions to those of the study’s author on how ER visits could be reduced. One notion: establishing “palliative care medical homes” that provide palliative care seamlessly across healthcare settings.


Risa’s Pieces has been a blog whose posts have been regularly featured in PCGR. In this post,
Risa writes about her new roles in and out of end-of-life care.

Over at the blog Death Club for Cuties, look for a new feature titled Memorial Monday.
Blogger Jerry Soucy visits a site called Find a Grave, searches through its database to find the people who died on the particular date of a given Monday, and then selects an entry that has some relevance to palliative care, or that otherwise resonates with him personally.

Next month’s host is Thaddeus Pope, at his blog http://medicalfutility.blogspot.com/. Lots of March posts on the subject of yes, medical futility. Among these posts you'll find many video links, one of them of a short film nominated for Best Animated Short Film at the 2010 Academy Awards. I think you'll find it worth eight minutes of your time. And while on the subject of the connection between the arts and death and dying, have a look at Pallimed's Arts and Humanities blog and postings by Drs. Christian, Clarkson, and Wollesen.


Of course, your comments are, as usual, invited.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Palliative Care Grand Rounds - March MMX

Read here for this month's Palliative Care Grand Rounds, a round-up of the best from the blogosphere. This month's host is Larry Beresford, who has written extensively over the years on hospice and palliative care matters.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Palliative Care Grand Rounds, February MMX

February's Palliative Care Grand Rounds is up (see here for an interesting collection of blog posts from the previous month, gathered by Jared Porter, blogger for Alive Hospice).

Friday, January 8, 2010

Palliative Care Grand Rounds - January edition

Visit here for the first Palliative Care Grand Rounds of 2010, hosted this month by Christian Sinclair, MD, a co-editor of the widely read and highly regarded blog Pallimed. Palliative Care Grand Rounds, now in its second year, is a monthly review of the best of hospice and palliative care content from blogs.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Palliative Care Grand Rounds - October edition

Visit here for the October edition of Palliative Care Grand Rounds - a monthly blog carnival highlighting some of the best and most interesting blog posts related to palliative care. Grand Rounds are published on the first Wednesday of every month. This month's host of Palliative Care Grand Rounds, GeriPal gives its own "spin", incorporating posts that feature the intersection between geriatrics and palliative care. GeriPal (Geriatrics and Palliative care) is a forum for discourse, recent news and research, and freethinking commentary and invites the perspectives of generalists, specialists, gerontologists, palliative care clinicians, and anyone else interested in care of the elderly or palliative care.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Thursday, August 6, 2009

August Edition of Palliative Care Grand Rounds

Palliative care has been much talked about in the context of health care reform. The August edition of Palliative Care Grand Rounds (here) , hosted by Risa Denenberg, offers readers an excellent round-up of the commentaries from the blogosphere.

Monday, June 29, 2009

Palliative Care Grand Rounds Vol 1, Issue 6

Welcome to the sixth edition of Palliative Care Grand Rounds, a monthly (appearing the first Wednesday of each month) summary of interesting, thought-provoking, timely, relevant, humane, and exceptionally well-written postings from the blogosphere.

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Health reform has been at or near the top of the news this past month, so it's hardly surprising that health reform and palliative care has found its way into the blogosphere. Usually within the context of rationing and futile care.

The blog Practical Bioethics addresses this issue in a well-reasoned way on a regular basis. In one of last month's posts, Dr. John Landos comments on one particularly useful way to think of the debates about rationing. Nearly 30 years ago, early in my career as a health care executive, one of the must-read publications for us was an insightful piece on rationing by the noted health economist Uwe Reinhardt. The title is as clever as it is fitting: Table Manners at the Health Care Feast.

What should a doctor recommend for a 90 year old man with pancreatic cancer and liver metastases? Palliative care? An Ohio surgeon thought so. Read the experience of Buckeye Surgeon in his blog . KevinMD picks up on this notion of futile care in his post.

Maggie Mahar offers an edifying piece around who should be responsible for defining futile care. In this post, she presents the case that " we also need to “pay more” for certain vital services such as primary care, chronic disease management, and palliative care. "

Are financial incentives for providers properly aligned with good palliative care? A New England Journal of Medicine article offers up a report on this matter, and Drew Rosielle, MD captures its highlights in his post. In a similar vein, Pallimed picks up on the hospice cap issue, as well as a recent press release from the National Alliance for Hospice Access. Access to the hospice benefit is a vital issue for patients, clinicians, executives, and policymakers, and has stirred up conflicting position statements and controversial points of view. To this blogger, the key question has been submerged. How should health care providers best organize to better assure open access for those with advanced illness, is what we ought to figure out.

Rationing versus futile care. Reading the blogosphere, and particularly comments to postings, leaves one with the impression that advanced illness management is either one or the other.

Prompted by President Obama's interview reply on the subject of the American approach to the end of life, David Tribble, MD, blogs about the "absurdity" of spending scarce resources on therapies known to be ineffective, but which Dr. Tribble adds, "we employ simply because we cannot stand not to."

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Alex Smith, MD, posts in the blog Geripal of the challenges of incorporating geriatric and palliative care into the Emergency Department. Dr. Smith asks "How can we integrate the vast experience and strengths of palliative and geriatric medicine in a setting such as the emergency department to meet the needs of older adults with serious illness, and contain costs?" No easy answers, to be sure, but a question every ED director and hospital executive should be asking. We know the HPM MDs and geriatricians have been asking questions like this for the past 15 years.

In his Medical Futility blog, Thaddeus Mason Pope comments on the disappointing, but unsurprising, survey results that Advance Directives are followed SOME of the time. Should we be doing more to make POLST documents a national standard?


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For patients and families seeking answers about palliative care, there are a handful of worthy blogs. In one, Dr. Pedro Calves relates an encounter with a patient who found the "pal" in palliative care. In another, written from the perspective of a patient under the care of hospice, the blogger/hospice patient comments on her health plan's reversal of an earlier denial and her change of hospice providers. When the author first started this blog, it was mainly to keep the people in her life up to date on how she was doing; now, it seems that she has picked up readers outside her immediate circle of family and friends. Angela Morrow brought this blog to my attention in last month's Palliative Care Grand Rounds.

Dr. Drew Roselle posts that most patients with advanced illnesses prefer to have hospice discussions, yet a recently published study found that only half of patients in this study had such discussions, and in a separate yet related post that understanding of CPR outcomes and code status is poor among hospitalized patients.

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Mort Kondracke is the Executive Editor of Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill. While technically not a blog (it's actually a column), Mr. Kondracke pays tribute to his mother's example of living - and also a "public policy" tribute to the manner of her death, in HOSPICE care. As health reform moves through Congress, a voice like that of Mr. Kondracke can be very powerful.

Veteran journalist Larry Beresford, who has written extensively about palliative care, discusses the emotional barriers to hospice access for people with terminal illnesses in a thought-provoking piece . Referring to several recent research studies, Mr. Beresford notes that
"this kind of research can help us understand some of the nuances of such encounters at the end of life, but I wonder if they take us closer to solving hospice's Flying Dutchman status in our society."


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Jessica Knapp writes in her blog The Good Death that she gives a two thumbs-up to the film, Departures, which, without much fanfare, won this year's Academy Award for Best Foreign Film. Then again, how many foreign films (award-winning and not) are greeted with great fanfare?
Glad that Ms. Knapp brought it to our readers' attention.

For a peek into the week of a hospice nurse, see Dethmama Chronicles. And Pallimed directs us to a week in the life of a palliative consult service, via Twitter.

Christian Sinclair, MD, co-editor of Pallimed and one of the prime movers behind Palliative Care Grand Rounds, announced a social media marketing venture and a sabattical from Pallimed. But not before he posted a useful summary of legislative and regulatory issues concerning palliative care.

On the arts/technology side, Amy Clarkson, MD reports on the complimentary blog of Pallimed about The Digital Afterlife, the legacy lockers and digital memorials brought to us by digital technology.


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Thanks to all who sent me suggestions for this month's Grand Rounds! And if you're interested, here's where you can find issues 1 , 2, 3, 4, and 5.

PCGR now has subscription options; you can follow by email or RSS feed. An aggregated feed of credible, rotating health and medicine blog carnivals is also available.

Next PCGR will be out August 5 and will be hosted by Risa Denenberg http://risaden.blogspot.com/- forward suggestions or links to risaden@gmail.com .

Friday, June 26, 2009

Palliative Care Blog Wrap-Up

I'll be hosting next month's Palliative Care Grand Rounds. Sign up here for a feed... and you'll have next month's, and the ones following, delivered to your desktop.