Tuesday, December 29, 2020
Dr. Powell reflects on all she has seen and the significance of vaccination
Monday, December 21, 2020
Becky's Vaccine Story
In August, I lost the second friend to it.
Yesterday, I lost the third -- a very dear friend. No, he was more than a friend, he was family. He was my brother's best friend, my mentor and friend, and my brother from another mother. After several days on a vent, he succumbed yesterday, two days after his 69th birthday.
I've watched so many loved ones who have family in long term care and have been separated from them for months -- unable to hug them, unable to sit with them, unable to just be present. Some of those family members have died alone. On a professional level, as one who manages our 11th Hour program, that's hard for me to hear. As a daughter whose mother died at home in September from natural causes, I cannot fathom having missed her final hours. Thinking of it breaks my heart for those who have had no choice.
I've watched my coworkers for MONTHS putting on layers of PPE, masks, shields, etc. I've watched their weariness, their sadness, their sacrifice. I've heard their stories of going home at night with their faces so red and irritated from the masks that they barely recognize themselves. I've heard them speak of sleeping away from and steering clear overall of their spouses and children to avoid risking exposing someone they love.
This virus is very, very real, and I want to do what I can to respect what so many are going through, and try to not be a catalyst for anyone else getting it. There's a lot of layers to the heartache this virus has caused. So when we got word at work earlier today that one of the local hospitals was giving us the opportunity to get the COVID-19 vaccine, it wasn't even a question. I signed up as soon as we were able, and I got my vaccine at 2:55 p.m. today. It wasn't painful at all. As I sit here now, it is 3:56 p.m. I feel just fine. Like any vaccine I would expect mild symptoms as it gets into my system, but we will see. Still, those symptoms are NOTHING compared to what so many others have been through - and what so many have lost this year as a result of COVID. This is the least I can do.
My hope is that soon the vaccine will be widely available, and that it will be the long, desperately prayed for solution to this pandemic nightmare. I pray that it will protect as it is intended to do, and that no one else will have to be sick with (or die from) this horrible virus.
Friday, December 18, 2020
Heart ‘n Home Hospice Video Series: “Hope for the Holidays”
Even during a public health emergency, hospice and palliative care professionals rise to the challenge of providing compassionate, person-centered care in the community. Kandice Dickinson, Director of Public Relations for Heart ‘n Home Hospice, shares a creative way they met their community’s need for grief support.
Hospice providers are experts in grief and bereavement, and
we believe we can be of greater support on a grander scale to many. We realize
that with today’s COVID crisis, every person in the world has experienced form
of grief – whether that is loss of life, a job, normal routines, and much more.
We recorded our six-part video series with our social
workers called “Hope for the Holidays” for all those who have lost someone –
especially the medical field professionals, who have lost so many patients to
COVID. We hope to shine a light again on how hospice professionals are experts
in bereavement and grief and can be a resource to all during this
pandemic. We want to help. They can all be found on our YouTube page at www.youtube.com/user/gohospice.
“The holidays are a difficult time for many people and
layered with the COVID-19 pandemic, the emotional stress is at a level that
none of us can truly imagine. Due to the restrictions for infection
prevention, we wanted to be able to reach individuals who were grieving and
struggling in their living rooms or wherever they may be virtually,” said
Felicia Comfort, CSWA, social worker at Heart ‘n Home Hospice.
The videos provide coping skills and strategies, and they
give people permission to grieve and create new traditions.
“Normally, people are able to be together to grieve and we
know this year is very different. We wanted individuals who may be suffering,
to know they are not alone and there are ways to help them cope during this
holiday season. Our hope would be that they would not feel alone and normalize
their feelings,” Felicia said.
At Heart ‘n Home, we are always seeking new and innovative
ways to be a definitive leader in hospice care. The creation of a recorded Hope
for the Holidays series that would be accessible to everyone is another way to
get creative and innovative in a very difficult time.
“My inspiration came from the phrase, ‘Necessity is the
mother of invention.’ It is a necessity to deliver services to our communities
and given the current environment we are in, this seemed like one innovative
way to do so,” said Mandy Putzier, social worker at Heart ‘n Home Hospice.
“My hope is that we can reach people who we are unable to
reach due to COVID. But even bigger than COVID is the idea that many people
would benefit from this type of support outside of a pandemic. There are many
different ways people grieve, so I believe there should be many different ways
people have access to grief support. My hope is this will help people now and
into the future,” Mandy continued.
Thursday, December 3, 2020
Hospice and Palliative Care Month Resolution
Rosen Introduces Bipartisan Resolution Designating November as National Hospice and Palliative Care Month, Resolution Passes Senate
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Jacky Rosen (D-NV), a member of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) and the Special Committee on Aging and a co-chair of the Comprehensive Care Caucus, announced her introduction of a bipartisan resolution to honor November as Hospice and Palliative Care Month. The resolution also unanimously passed the U.S. Senate last night. Fellow caucus co-chairs Senators John Barrasso (R-WY), Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), and Deb Fischer (R-NE) are original co-sponsors of this resolution. Observed in November, National Hospice and Palliative Care Month is a time to honor the vital services that hospice and palliative care organizations provide to patients and their families facing serious illnesses and injuries:
“As someone who stepped back from my career to take care of my parents and in-laws as they got older and started to have serious health problems, I understand just how important it is for patients and families to have access to care that is compassionate and comprehensive,” said Senator Rosen. “We know that palliative care helps meet patient needs, and by observing National Hospice and Palliative Care Month, we will be able to give this very real issue the attention that it deserves. I am proud to be joined by my Comprehensive Care Caucus co-chairs to introduce this bipartisan resolution recognizing the importance of palliative care for patients, families, friends, and caregivers.”
BACKGROUND: Last
June, Rosen introduced the bipartisan Provider Training in Palliative
Care Act (S.1921) with Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-AK). This legislation
would update the National Health Service Corps program to include palliative
care medicine as an eligible primary care service.
Last July, Senators Rosen, Barrasso, Baldwin, and Fischer launched the bipartisan Comprehensive Care Caucus to raise the public’s awareness and promote the availability and benefits of palliative care, while also finding bipartisan solutions to expand access to palliative care services, improve coordinated care, and address issues impacting caregivers. The Caucus’ mission is to work to enhance access to palliative care services and improve the quality of life of millions of Americans managing serious illnesses.
This resolution (S.Res.783) is endorsed by the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization (NHPCO), the Coalition to Transform Advanced Care (C-TAC), and the National Partnership for Healthcare and Hospice Innovation.
###
In response to this resolution passed by the U.S. Senate, NHPCO President and CEO Edo Banach stated:
“We thank Senator Rosen for spearheading this resolution passed by the U.S. Senate that recognizes the critically important work done our nation’s hospice and palliative care provider community. President Ronald Reagan first recognized November as National Hospice Month over forty years ago and it’s heartening to see national recognition continue. Hospices have traditionally marked November as a time to celebrate their staff and volunteers and to engage with the communities they serve to increase awareness. It means a great deal to our entire provider community to have this validation of our work from the Senate.”
Tuesday, December 1, 2020
Giving Tuesday is December 1
Non-profit organizations across the globe are marking “Giving Tuesday” on December 1, 2020. Following the initial holiday weekend marked by Thanksgiving, which has evolved to include “Black Friday” and “Cyber Monday” – two of the biggest shopping days in the country – “Giving Tuesday” was established to add an important note of philanthropy to the holiday.
In this season of generosity, the National Hospice Foundation wants to thank the many supportive donors who have helped our work continue during COVID-19, including grants for PPE, helping patients have a special experience, creating resources to support diversity and inclusion, and helping hospices provide Veteran-centric care.
Today, NHF is joining other nonprofits across the world to recognize “Giving Tuesday,” now a global day of generosity. To support our work, make a donation online.
Thank you for being part of our community.
Friday, November 20, 2020
The Space where Hospice and COVID-19 Meet
Even during a public health emergency, hospice and palliative care professionals rise to the challenge of providing compassionate, person-centered care in the community. During National Hospice and Palliative Care Month, Transitions LifeCare welcomes one of their own who shares her experiences as a health care provider during COVID-19.
My Job As A Hospice Nurse
I started my job as a hospice nurse two years after placing my husband’s dusty ashes into a cool, marble niche of our church’s columbarium. My move into working for hospice was seamless. I found a nurse manager position posted at the hospice where Greg died. I applied, interviewed, and was offered the job over the next three days.
My first year in hospice was brutal, each day an exhausting trek up a steep learning curve. I insisted on doing patient care, knowing I would never be a good manager until I understood what my team was actually doing. Months ticked by, I learned about billing and Medicare regulations, I learned about the Comfort Kit – a hospice first aid kit, and I witnessed patients move into the pause of death. After a year, I had days I was proud of, where I offered support and guidance where it was most needed, where I closed my laptop with a sense of accomplishment. Then COVID-19 came along.
COVID-19
Sometime in February, another manager mentioned that we should talk about the coronavirus at our next staff meeting. His wife was a researcher and quickly recognized the significance of the news from China, of the first cases popping up on the west coast. In early March, we started updating a few policies and procedures. By mid-to-late March, work was completely turned upside down. Every workflow, every guideline, every policy was reviewed and rewritten to accommodate the presence of the coronavirus in our community. We launched a system for implementing telehealth. We developed PPE guidelines for staff doing direct patient care, changing and updating them as the CDC learned more about viral transmission. Most staff started working exclusively from home.
Patients and staff fit into three categories: 1) presumed negative, 2) person-under-investigation, or 3) positive. Leadership implemented complex algorithms to track the status of every patient and staff member. We partnered with a local lab to test patients and staff. Many of our patients live in long-term care facilities with their own set of rules. More spreadsheets and algorithms were developed to keep track of each patient at each facility with each set of rules.
Lock Down Creates Loneliness
As news showed body bags pouring out of nursing homes, some facilities went into almost complete lock down, prohibiting any visitors. Many cut off the hospice social worker, chaplain, CNA, and volunteer, allowing in only a carefully screened, fully PPE-protected hospice nurse. Families were severed from prior routines. Used to visiting loved ones weekly (sometimes daily) to read or share a meal, they were told they could come no more. Patients with memory disorders, who couldn’t navigate video or phone visits, were suddenly severed from every molecule of familiarity. Even the med tech delivering their medications appeared masked and gowned, once-familiar eyes now behind a face shield when delivering the plastic cup of pills.
Hospice teams meet every two weeks to discuss each patient, beginning with a remembrance of patients who died. A few weeks after lockdown, my team started talking about the loneliness of facility patients. While hospice patients decline over time, eating less and sleeping more, patients in facilities seemed to be wrapped in a caul of unsettling dullness. A gentleman who always delighted in a sweet, sticky honeybun, left the pastry untouched on the plate, hours into staleness. Another patient whose confused mind had been kept busy with daily group activities and meals, started wandering into other patient rooms, causing mayhem and confusion. My team was in anguish over not being able to help more with the empty sadness of moving towards death alone. A few patients contracted the virus and died quickly while others tested positive and remained asymptomatic, still trapped by the rigid confines of the pandemic rules.
One facility created a small opening, a whisper of grace. Patients on hospice were permitted one or two visitors for small blocks of time. In early June, we had two patients admitted from this facility. A few weeks later, we had two more. Then, we had three referrals in one day. Word got out that enrolling onto hospice was a way to by-pass the lock-down. Our Medical Director took a more thoughtful look at admission requests from this facility – to ensure the patients met the medical criteria for hospice eligibility. One frail, elderly resident, not on hospice, stopped eating when her daughter could no longer visit. She lost 15 pounds in a month, making her eligible for hospice. She enrolled onto service. Once her daughter could visit, she started eating again. COVID-19 restrictions took away her reason to live, hospice gave it back to her. Now, our team will provide care, tend to any symptoms of discomfort. If she recovers to where she is not hospice appropriate, then we will have to discharge her. Maybe by then, COVID-19 will have diminished and loved ones will be allowed to visit again.
I think about the facility that changed its strict visitation rules. Someone recognized that dying alone is an unacceptable travesty, that at end of life, nothing matters more than the physical presence of loved ones. As I look at COVID-19 graphs and trends, I am hopeful for a time when the coronavirus and whirling chaos come to an end, or at least become a manageable lull. For those who enter the mysterious space of life’s waning, I hope that they loosen their grip on the burden of pain and the illusion of control, that they free themselves from the trap of scheduled medications and grueling appointments. I deeply, passionately hope that they glide or tumble or even fall into being present with the ones they love.
- By Sara L. Sousa
Sara, currently performance improvement coordinator for Transitions LifeCare, wrote this post when she was an RN team leader. Sara lives in Durham, NC with her children and enjoys spreading her creative wings when time permits.
Friday, October 30, 2020
Care Dimensions Helps Young Father Meet End-of-Life Goals
Even during a public health emergency, hospice and palliative care professionals rise to the challenge of providing compassionate, person-centered care in the community. Care Dimensions shares how they were able to honor the wishes of a patient while navigating the landscape of COVID-19.
Thursday, October 8, 2020
Community Hospice's Faces of Caring
Even during a public health emergency, hospice and palliative care professionals rise to the challenge of providing compassionate, person-centered care in the community. Community Hospice, Inc. in California shares how their team has adapted to a virtual environment while still putting patients and families first.
Although the delivery of programs and services looks a little different, the focus of providing community-based palliative and hospice care to patients and families wherever they call home remains the same. To ensure the health and safety of both staff, patients and families, additional safety precautions, personal protective equipment and education has been implemented when providing care out in the community. Palliative and hospice staff continue to address the physical, emotional and spiritual care needs of patients and their families, all while addressing the everchanging uncertainty and fear of the public health crisis.
Community Hospice’s Speakers Bureau and educational programs have also moved to virtual platforms, engaging patients, families and community participants through creative videos, lunch and learns and lecture as they gain insight and valuable resources on wide variety of topics. Positive Vibes, a new video series created by volunteers, launched in April and is released each Friday morning on the Community Hospice website, YouTube channel and Facebook page @CommunityHospiceCV. The video series shares fun and easy to create activities and encouraging messages for the entire family. Other virtual programs and events offered include a Candlelight Vigil honoring hospice and partnering frontline health care heroes and those affected by COVID-19, our annual Clergy Forum, Stronger Together campaign, Coping with the Holidays, fundraising events and more.
Friday, September 25, 2020
Regional Hospice's Creative Approach to Advance Care Planning
Even during a public health crisis, hospice and palliative care professionals rise to the challenge of providing compassionate, person-centered care in the community. It’s especially important now for people to consider their health care wishes. Regional Hospice has a creative way to help broach the topic.
As the country continues to face the impact of COVID-19,
it’s important for everyone to consider their health care wishes should they
have a serious illness – and communicate those wishes with their loved ones.
Regional Hospice of Danbury, Connecticut has launched a new
spot in their long-term campaign, Making the Best of Every Day,
to address the important topic of advance care planning in a more comfortable
and approachable platform. “Not Fred!”,
a 30-second animated commercial, is the fourth in an award-winning series
tackling end-of-life choices and making the best of every day.
Written by Marvin Waldman, former Executive Creative
Director at Young & Rubicam, and animated by J. J. Sedelmaier, the segment
delicately approaches losing a partner through a light, but sincere, exchange
about who a wife should date after her husband’s death.
“Stories that use humor, and situations everyone can relate
to, open the door to talking about death in a less intimidating way,” says
Cynthia Emiry Roy, MS, LCSW, CHA, President & CEO of Regional Hospice,
“They start the discussion.”
“Not Fred!” takes a sweet and relatable approach to a subject that many find difficult to discuss. While they are animated, these faces of caring are helping the community members start the conversation with their loved ones.
If you would like to share the creative ways your hospice and palliative care team is caring for patients amid the COVID-19 crisis, please send us your photos and stories so you can be featured in the #hapcFacesOfCaring campaign.
Friday, September 18, 2020
UC Davis Hospice: Bringing Comfort and Smiles to Hospice Patients During COVID-19
Even during a public health crisis, hospice and palliative care professionals rise to the challenge of providing compassionate, person-centered care in the community. UC Davis Hospice shares how their outreach to the community led to new resources and comforting, personal touches for their patients.
When COVID-19 precautions shut down our in-person volunteer
program, UC Davis Hospice began looking for creative ways to provide comfort
and smiles to our patients. With our hospice volunteers busy making cards and
offering telephonic support to patients, we expanded our reach to the community
to offer ways they could help support UC Davis Hospice. The response we have
received from the community has been truly amazing.
Erin Bjork, Hospice Volunteer Coordinator and mom of two
teenagers, knew that many high school students needed virtual ways to fulfill
community service hours during this time of COVID-19 restrictions. After
reaching out to several local high schools, over 20 students responded wanting
to help. The students quickly got to work making cloth face masks, homemade
cards, care packages of comfort items, COVID-19 safety kits, and fleece tie
blankets. Our patients have been so grateful and touched to receive these items
from our local teens. Andrew Condrin, a high school senior who made fleece tie
blankets and care packages, said “I didn’t know much about hospice care at
first, but during my project, I learned how hospice helps give patients a
peaceful death. I’m glad I could donate to a good cause that comforts people
during the end of their lives.”
High school students delivering care packages |
By further networking within the Sacramento community and on
VolunteerMatch.org, UC Davis Hospice has received donations of fidget blankets
for dementia patients, custom bracelets with inspirational sayings, and cloth
face masks. An organization called Alice’s
Embrace reached out at the beginning of the pandemic to offer beautiful,
hand-knit blankets for our hospice patients. We have given out more than 60 Alice’s
Embrace blankets to our patients, who have been so grateful to receive these
handmade gifts.
Social worker Tiffany delivering Alice’s Embrace blankets |
Another special touch that UC Davis provides is through our
partnership with The Petal Connection.
The Petal Connection donates lovely floral bouquets twice per month to UC Davis
Hospice. The staff love the smiles and joy that these flowers bring to the
hospice patients.
Petal Connection
flowers being delivered to UC Davis Hospice |
The engagement and enthusiasm from our staff and community
members have been truly inspiring during the pandemic. We are excited to find
new ways to further support our patients!
If you would like to share the creative ways your hospice and palliative care team is caring for patients amid the COVID-19 crisis, please send us your photos and stories so you can be featured in the #hapcFacesOfCaring campaign.
Thursday, September 10, 2020
Gilchrist's Many Faces of Caring
Even during a public health crisis, hospice and palliative care professionals rise to the challenge of providing compassionate, person-centered care in the community. Gilchrist shares how the many members of their interdisciplinary team support each other and their community in times of need.
The way our teams at Gilchrist deliver care is much different today than a few months ago. There are fewer in-person visits and more virtual ones, and those used to offering a hug or a comforting touch must offer only words instead.
In addition to their usual care, our staff now have the added responsibility of addressing families’ fear and uncertainty. The work is difficult, but they are pushing past the challenges to do what they are trained to do. Here are just a few of our many Faces of Caring.
Palliative Care for COVID+ Patients
Since March, our palliative care nurse practitioners have been working day in and day out with the COVID-positive nursing home population. They help the residents and their families cope with the illness and the associated losses, as well as their symptoms. They also facilitate difficult and often sad conversations, ultimately helping patients set their goals of care and weigh their medical decisions.
Pictured: Nurse practitioners Tracie Morgan, Amanda Wiese and Esther Schaftel |
Hospice for COVID+ Patients
Pictured: Hospice nurses Delores Williams and Erica D'Alesandro |
Pictured: Hospice nurses Kristin Metzger and Oksana Horwitz |
Pictured: Pediatric hospice patient Amanda Gonzales with sister, Sarah, and music therapist Lacy Kidwell |
Pictured: Grief counselor Carol Hallinan |
If you would like to share the creative ways your hospice and palliative care team is caring for patients amid the COVID-19 crisis, please send us your photos and stories so you can be featured in the #hapcFacesOfCaring campaign.