Understand the general principles of hospice/palliative
care.
Learn the differences between hospital-based and home-based
hospice care.
Learn the diseases (and their pathophysiology) most
likely to place a patient in need of palliative care.
Learn the medical principles of palliative care.
Learn the pharmacologic agents most frequently
employed on the hospice unit.
Become familiar with a variety of non-pharmacologic
treatments for problems seen in the terminally ill, including family,
individual, and spiritual counseling.
Learn the psychotropic agents most frequently
employed in the HIV population.
Skills:
Learn to diagnose and assess pain.
Learn to treat pain with a variety of therapeutic strategies
(narcotics, steroids, antidepressants, palliative radiation, psychosocial).
Learn to treat other common symptoms such as nausea
and dyspnea, cachexia, agitation and depression.
Learn to assess and treat common emotional and
behavioral problems in HIV-positive
patients.
Learn to communicate empathetically with dying
patients and their family members, taking into account cultural,
religious, and educational differences.
Learn to recognize and consider treatment for
psychological distress.
Attitude:
Become familiar with ethical and legal considerations in the
practice of palliative care.
Respect the roles of the multiple disciplines that
participate in palliative care.
Become familiar with the psychosocial, emotional, and
spiritual issues associated with the end of life.
Exhibit integrity, compassion, sensitivity, respect,
and courtesy.
Honor the wishes of patients and families.
Appreciate the multi-faceted nature of suffering.
Appreciate ethnic and religious contributions to
end-of-life decisions.
Activities and
Responsibilities:
The student will spend at least one day per week with the
VNA Hospice team and will attend interdisciplinary team meetings and make
home visits with the nursing staff. If there are patients who make the
transition from the Palliative Care Unit to home or vice versa, the student will follow
those patients through the transition.
The student will make rounds with the Pharmacy Pain Control team
in order to learn the process of pain assessment and the appropriate
choice, dosage, and route for administration of narcotic and adjuvant
analgesic therapies (steroids, NSAIDs, narcotics, antidepressants,
neuropathic agents, palliative chemotherapeutic agents).
The student will attend Interdisciplinary Palliative Care
Unit (PCU) Team rounds every Wednesday morning in order to learn the role
of the physician on a Palliative Care team and to observe the importance
of the roles played by other team members.
The student will participate in patient care and in clinical
chart review to gain familiarity with palliative care admission criteria,
assessment tools, and treatment plans.
The student will schedule time to make rounds with the Pastoral
Services staff and will make an effort, if comfortable with the religious
content, to be present for specific religious rites (such as the Catholic
Sacrament of the Sick).
The student will consult to and follow patients with
terminal illness who are being treated on Medical/Surgical Units by the
Psychiatry Consultation/Liaison Service at Hartford Hospital.
Formal Teaching Activities:
The student will be assigned a faculty preceptor who
will meet with him/her twice weekly and at the beginning and end of the
rotation for discussion sessions.
The student will prepare a 20-30 minute presentation on
a relevant topic of his/her choice, preferably one that is based upon a real case
encountered during the rotation. This presentation may be done at any
time during the rotation that is mutually agreeable to the student and the
preceptor.
Supervision:
Supervision will be provided by the Palliative Care Unit
staff, including medical directors, nurses, psychiatrists, attending
physicians in various medical disciplines (commonly hematology/oncology,
infectious disease), pastoral services staff, anesthesiologists, and
pharmacists. The student will meet weekly with the preceptor for the
rotation for on-going feedback and clarification of goals. In addition,
at the beginning and end of the rotation the preceptor will meet with the
student for orientation and evaluation purposes.
Readings:
Each student will be provided with the HH Palliative
Care Manual, which contains a broad overview of articles relevant to
Palliative care.
Facilities:
Hartford Hospital
Inpatient Palliative Care Unit (located in close proximity to the
Psychiatry Consultation/Liaison office, the Hartford Hospital Library and
Pastoral Services office) HIV Outpatient Clinic (psychiatry consultation service)
Hartford VNA Hospice
Evaluation:
The Medical Director of the PCU will submit a brief
narrative evaluation of each student that is based on input from the psychiatry
service, the nursing staff, the pain control teams, the pastoral services
staff, the preceptor, and the student. Prior to this evaluation, the
preceptor will have met with the student to discuss the student’s assessment of
the rotation and performance in the rotation. The evaluation will include
verification of the student’s completion of the rotation, commentary on
the student’s achievement of specified goals, and an assessment of the
student’s performance in the final presentation.
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