Abstract
e24113 Background: Hospice underutilization among patients with advanced cancer at the end of life can result in patients not receiving the full benefit of hospice and lead to significant distress to patients, families, staff and caregivers. Through multidisciplinary root cause analyses, we identified a gap in services where hospice care, if pursued at all, did not occur until late in the course. A pilot program for community-based palliative services partnering with Calvary Hospital Advanced Healthcare Coordination was introduced for patients with advanced solid tumor cancer in February 2022. Methods: Solid tumor oncologists, social workers and palliative care physicians identified eligible patients with advanced stage cancer who may or may not be undergoing cancer-directed treatment with palliative intent. Patients received home-based support by palliative trained nurse practitioners, licensed social workers and spiritual counsel including symptom management, advanced care planning, care coordination and hospice transition if indicated. The pilot was launched initially in thoracic oncology in February 2022, with expansion to all solid tumor oncology patients in April 2022. Results: From February 1, 2022 to December 31, 2022, a total of 34 patients were referred for community-based palliative care services. Only 15/34 (44%) referrals were taken under care. Of the patients taken under care 7/15 (46.7%) were eventually transitioned to hospice services, and 4/15 (26.7%) patients expired while receiving community-based palliative care services. Of the remaining patients that were not taken under care (n = 19), 6/19 (31.5%) required a higher level of care and were hospitalized, 4/19 (21.1%) went directly to hospice care. Process measures including pain scores, completion of advanced care planning documents, depression scores, treatments given while in pilot, number of hospitalizations, as well as patient-reported outcomes are ongoing. Conclusions: Our pilot demonstrates that while community-based palliative care services can potentially bridge patients from palliative care services to hospice at the end of life, several patients may still have been referred “too late” in their course. Future plan-do-study-act cycles aim to continue to improve the number and timing of referrals to this pilot program and evaluate its impact in hospice utilization for patients with advanced cancer at end of life.
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