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1.
Prehosp Emerg Care ; 27(5): 560-565, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36961936

ABSTRACT

Emergency medical services (EMS) systems are designed to provide care in the field and while transporting patients to a hospital; however, patients enrolled in hospice may not want invasive therapies nor benefit from hospitalization. For many reasons, encounters with hospice patients can be challenging for EMS systems, EMS clinicians, hospice clinicians, hospice patients, and their families.


EMS clinicians should receive hospice-focused education that fosters a basic understanding of hospice, palliative therapies, and advance care planning documents (e.g., Physician Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment). This education should emphasize the ongoing development of end-of-life communication skills.EMS medical directors and local hospice organizations should collaborate to develop hospice patient-centered EMS protocols that address symptom management and delineate appropriate and goal concordant clinical interventions, and that are within the agency-level scope of practice for local EMS clinicians. Partnerships between EMS and hospice organizations can facilitate access to hospice teams who can provide clear guidance on whether to treat-in-place with follow-up care or to transport hospice patients to the hospital.EMS medical directors and local hospice organizations should collaborate to perform needs assessments of hospice patient EMS utilization.EMS medical directors should consider including a focus on EMS care of hospice patients as part of their overall quality management program(s). Ideally these efforts should be collaborative with local hospice agencies in order to facilitate meaningful process improvement strategies that include both EMS and hospice stakeholders.Reimbursement programs should reasonably compensate EMS agencies for scene treatment in place, as well as transport to alternative destinations such as in-patient hospice facilities.


Subject(s)
Emergency Medical Services , Hospice Care , Hospices , Adult , Humans , Hospitalization
2.
J Palliat Med ; 26(5): 704-710, 2023 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36607791

ABSTRACT

Emergency medical services (EMS) clinicians increasingly encounter seriously ill patients and their caregivers in times of distress. When crises arise or care coordination falls short, these high-stakes interactions highlight opportunities to improve care experience and outcomes. Efforts must address wide educational gaps, absence of specialized care protocols, and systematic fragmentation leading to hyperlocal practice. The authors represent cross-sectional expertise in palliative care and EMS. This article describes unmet needs at the EMS-palliative interface, challenges with collaboration, and where directional progress exists.


Subject(s)
Emergency Medical Services , Hospice and Palliative Care Nursing , Humans , Palliative Care/methods , Cross-Sectional Studies
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