End of Life Option Act: One Year. Susie Crandall Hospice East Bay. CAHSAH CHAPCA Annual Conference & Expo May 22 24, 2018, Monterey, CA

Similar documents
2008 Summary of Oregon s Death with Dignity Act

CA End of Life Option Act

A Bill Regular Session, 2015 SENATE BILL 717

Understanding Medical Aid in Dying

Patient and Family Agreement on Opioids

SIXTY-FOURTH LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WYOMING 2017 GENERAL SESSION

Medical Aid-in-Dying 4348 Waialae Avenue #927 Honolulu, HI phone CompassionAndChoices.org

What You Need To Know About Palliative Care. Natalie Wu Moy, LCSW, MSPA RUHS Medical Center Hospital Social Services Director

Policy \ \ Medical (Palliative) Use of Marijuana

Policy / Drug and Alcohol-Free Workshops

Physician Assisted Death and Voluntary Active Euthanasia

Sixth Annual Report on Oregon s Death with Dignity Act

SHOULD DOCTORS BE ALLOWED TO ASSIST SERIOUSLY ILL PATIENTS WITH SUICIDE?

Ahsan U. Rashid, M.D., F.A.C.P.

Evaluations. Dementia Update: A New National Plan for Alzheimer s Disease Research, Care and Services. Disclosure Statements.

Palliative Care and Hospice. University of Illinois at Chicago College of Nursing

Mapping Palliative Care Need and Supply in California: Methodology

Wisconsin Dementia Care Guiding Principles

Responding to Requests for Hastened Death. Dr Douglas McGregor Medical Director Victoria Hospice December 7 th 2015, UBC Division of Palliative Care

Founded in 1978 as Hospice of the North Shore. Know Your Choices. A Guide for People with Serious Illness

Understanding Maine s Medical Marijuana Law

Model Intervention for Students with Substance Abuse Problems Act

BACK TO THE FUTURE: Palliative Care in the 21 st Century

Palliative Care to Hospice: Forging an Effective Partnership. Dennis Cox, LCSW

Seventh Annual Report on Oregon s Death with Dignity Act

2017 National Association of Social Workers. All Rights Reserved. 1

416 DRUG AND ALCOHOL TESTING I. PURPOSE

PALLIATIVE CARE The Relief You Need When You Have a Serious Illness

PALLIATIVE CARE IN NEW YORK STATE

Responding to Requests for Hastened Death in an Environment Where the Practice is Legally Prohibited

Palliative Care Standards & Models

There Is Something More We Can Do: An Introduction to Hospice and Palliative Care

FOCUS AREA OF THE 1X SESSION OF THE OPEN-ENDED WORKING GROUP ON AGEING

Consultation on Legislative Options for Assisted Dying

GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA SESSION 2013 H 1 HOUSE BILL 933. Short Title: Informed Consent for HIV/AIDS Testing. (Public)

Quality of Life (F309 End of Life) Interpretive Guidance Investigative Protocol

Dr. Andrea Johnson Saskatoon Health Region/Saskatoon Cancer Centre September 30, 2016

SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE ON HOUSE BILL NO. 2217

Chapter 6. Hospice: A Team Approach to Care

Support for the End-of-Life Option Act: Improving Care and Promoting Choice at the End of Life. Michael J Strauss, MD, MPH

SIXTY-FOURTH LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WYOMING 2017 GENERAL SESSION

Hospice and Palliative Care An Essential Component of the Aging Services Network

END-OF-LIFE DECISIONS HONORING THE WISHES OF A PERSON WITH ALZHEIMER S DISEASE

Palliative care for children with Rare Diseases

Palliative Care: Improving quality of life when you re seriously ill.

Circle Of Life SM Educators

Achieving earlier entry to hospice care: Issues and strategies. Sonia Lee, APN, GCNS-BC

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT MENTAL HEALTH ADVANCE DIRECTIVES GUIDE FOR CONSUMERS

The Crazy World of

The Challenge. Bill Frist, M.D.!

Drug and Alcohol Prevention Program Biennial Review

Module 6: Substance Use

New York. Prescribing and Dispensing Profile. Research current through November 2015.

Maine s Medical Marijuana Law. 40 th Annual ASMAC Fall Conference Ritz Carlton Lake Tahoe October 26, 2014

Understanding Hospice, Palliative Care and of-life Issues

Dementia Signs & Symptoms Guide. Recognizing signs of dementia, getting a diagnosis, and making a plan for the future

SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE ON HOUSE BILL NO. 2031

STATEMENT OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF SUICIDOLOGY: SUICIDE IS NOT THE SAME AS PHYSICIAN AID IN DYING

Conversations of a Lifetime. Conversations of a Lifetime 4/22/2016. What is Advance Care Planning?

Seeing through the Smoke: Preparing Your Workplace for Legalized Marijuana. October 23, 2018

Palliative Care, Hospice, and the Medical Home. Rob Stone MD Director, Palliative Care Indiana Health Bloomington

PROPOSED AMENDMENTS TO HOUSE BILL 3440

Illinois Supreme Court. Language Access Policy

CERTIFICATION OF ENROLLMENT ENGROSSED SUBSTITUTE SENATE BILL th Legislature 2007 Regular Session

Quality and Fiscal Metrics: What Proves Success?

Prescription Monitoring Program (PMP)

Association of Manitoba Municipalities: 2018 Municipal Officials Seminar

Cancer and Advance Care Planning You ve been diagnosed with cancer. Now what?

a call to states: make alzheimer s a policy priority

FOR THE STATE OF LEGISLATIVE SESSION

DRUG AND ALCOHOL POLICY

SFIREG Issue Paper: Pesticide Use on Cannabis State Established Pesticide Residue Action Levels

Supportive Care Coalition Pursuing Excellence

NOTICE OF RIGHTS OF STUDENTS AND PARENTS UNDER SECTION 504

As Passed by the House. Regular Session Sub. H. B. No

Palliative Care: Mission and Strategic Imperative. Sarah E. Hetue Hill, PhD Ascension Healthcare

ORDINANCE NO AN ORDINANCE ESTABLISHING A POLICY FOR A DRUG-FREE WORKPLACE

DO PEOPLE WITH MENTAL ILLNESS FEEL WELCOME IN MY PARISH?

DISCLOSURE OF ALCOHOL AND SUBSTANCE/DRUG ABUSE RECORDS. This Policy describes permissible disclosures of Alcohol and Substance/Drug Abuse Records.

West Virginia. Prescribing and Dispensing Profile. Research current through November 2015.

c i r c l e o f l i f e a w a r d C I R C L E o f L I F E

SENATE FILE NO. SF0042. Sponsored by: Joint Judiciary Interim Committee A BILL. for. AN ACT relating to public health and safety; creating the

DIRECTIONS FOR USING THE MENTAL HEALTH ADVANCE DIRECTIVE POWER OF ATTORNEY FORM

Learning Objectives. Hospice Size. CoPs (cont d) The Problem: Pertinent Medicare CoPs related to Hospice Medical Directors

Quality of Life (F309 End of Life) Surveyor Train the Trainer: Interpretive Guidance Investigative Protocol

Hospice Basics and Benefits

APOSW The Association of Pediatric Oncology Social Workers Standards of Practice

Know Your Choices: A Guide for Patients with Serious Advancing Illness

in March, The Oregon Death With Dignity Act passed a referendum in November,

Pharmacy Law Disclosure Statement. Objectives 6/11/2016. I have no conflicts of interest to disclose related to this presentation.

Psychotropic Medication

Referred to Committee on Health and Human Services. SUMMARY Establishes an opioid overdose prevention policy for Nevada.

NeuroPI Case Study: Palliative Care Counseling and Advance Care Planning

Naloxone Access Statutes

revised anatomical gift act

2012 AAHPM & HPNA Annual Assembly

Pacific University College of Health Professions Interdisciplinary Case Conference: Palliative Care. March 5, 2010

Using Disease Trajectories to Guide Social work Practice with Chronically Ill patients and Their Caregivers. Christina Kulp, LCSW, ACHP-SW

PALLIATIVE CARE PALLIATIVE CARE FOR THE CANCER PATIENT OBJECTIVES. Mountain States Cancer Conference November 2, 2013


Transcription:

End of Life Option Act: One Year Susie Crandall Hospice East Bay Play the 2018 Conference Post to Win Game for a chance to win different prizes each day! 1

Session Objectives 1. Understand what has led to the EOLOA being enacted into law 2. Understand the contents of the law 3. Understand what an organization needs to consider 4. Understand the impact of the law in California to date May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 4 2

Setting the Stage Life expectancy 1900 = 40 years Life expectancy 2000 = 80 years 1900: Infectious diseases caused death 2000: Degenerative diseases caused death During the last 50+ years, medicine has become increasingly capable of postponing death Death moved from home to hospital transitioned from natural to medical process May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 5 Today Nearly half of all Americans die in a hospital Nearly 70% die in a facility: hospital, SNF or long-term care facility 7 out of 10 want to die at home Almost 1/3 see 10 or more physicians in the last 6 months of life May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 6 3

The Economic Cost of Dying Patients with chronic illness in their last two years of life account for about 32% of total Medicare spending Medicare covers 1/3 of the cost of treating cancer in the final year, 78% occurring in the last month of life Costs about 1/3 less if an EOL discussion May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 7 The Emotional Cost of Dying Suffering for the dying patient What some medical staff view as futile treatment Mental anguish for loved ones making difficult decisions May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 8 4

Dying in America America: The only country where death is optional Dying increasing involves choice Aggressive treatment? Palliative care? Hospice care? Life-ending medication? May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 9 Language Death with Dignity Act: OR and WA Patient Choice & Control at End-of-Life Care Act: VT End-of-Life Option Act: CA and MT Physician-Assisted Death Physician-Assisted Suicide Aid in Dying May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 10 5

The California Law Legal in California as of June 9, 2016 Sunset Clause (unique to California): The law remains in effect until 1/1/2026 unless another statute is enacted to extend May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 11 Law Contents Terminally ill, competent adult (18+) Resident of California Medically predicted to die within 6 mos. Decision-making capacity Physical and mental ability to selfadminister the medication Request made solely and directly by the individual, not on behalf of May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 12 6

Physician Involvement 2 physicians, an attending and a consulting Both affirm diagnosis, competence and decision-making ability Attending MD prescribes and completes official paperwork Physician must discuss feasible alternatives, such as hospice, PC Optional referral to psychiatrist May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 13 Forms 2 verbal requests and 1 written request 15 day waiting periods between verbals 2 witnesses sign/date written request Witness cannot be involved MD or mental health specialist Only 1 witness can be related by blood, partnership, adoption, etc. Attestation form 48 hours before taking meds May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 14 7

General Provisions Not considered suicide or assisted suicide under California statutes Underlying illness cause of death Recommendations: Have another person present Notify next of kin/family Don t take in a public place Participate in a hospice program Keep meds safe until ingestion May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 15 Medication Secobarbital or pentobarbital most frequently used; cost $3000 to $5000 Compound med being used; cost $400 Medicare will not cover the medication MediCal will cover the medication Most private insurance companies will cover May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 16 8

The Oregon Experience 480,000 died between 1998 & 2013 752 used the Act (1,173 prescriptions) 53% male 98% Caucasian 46% married 72% college educated 90% enrolled in hospice 95% died at home May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 17 Reasons for Using the Law Autonomy Ability to enjoy life Loss of dignity Control of bodily functions Burden on family, friends, caregivers Inadequate pain control or concerns about pain Financial implications May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 18 9

California Data 183,265 died between June-December 2016 191 received prescriptions 111 (58.1%) died from end-of-life medication 21 (11%) died without using the med 59 (30.9%) outcome not yet known 173 unique MDs prescribed the drugs May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 19 California Age Data 87% 60+ years of age Median age: 73 12.6% under 60 75.6% 60-89 11.7% 90 or older May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 20 10

California Data 89% Caucasian 54.1% female 72.1% some college education 83.8% receiving hospice and/or PC May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 21 Insurance Data 96.4% had health insurance 56.8% Medicare or MediCal 30.6% private insurance 9% undetermined health insurance May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 22 11

Disease Data 58.6% cancer 18% neurological disorders, such as ALS or Parkinson s 8.1% heart disease 6.3% lung respiratory disease 9% other underlying illnesses May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 23 Cancer Data 20% lung cancer 18.5% breast cancer 12.3% pancreatic cancer 10.8% prostate cancer 38.5% other malignant neoplasms May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 24 12

Hospice Utilization 83.8% had hospice or PC services Low utilization compared to Oregon (98%) May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 25 Healthcare Workers Protection No civil or criminal liability or neglect for acting in good faith, including being present when patient takes the meds No censure, discipline, loss of license, privileges, or membership, or other penalties to members of professional organizations for either participating or not participating May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 26 13

Opting Out Providers may opt out because they are unable or unwilling to participate Can continue to provide other patient services while abstaining from fulfilling the request May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 27 Institutional Prohibitions Allowed Institutions (organizations) may prohibit employees from participating in the act Must provide written notice to the employees and the general public regarding its policy Policy allows providers to give all other services May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 28 14

Organizational Choice Full Participation Medical professionals associated with organization may serve as attending physicians under the law and write the prescriptions Staff can be present at time of ingestion and actively support patient/family during the process May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 29 Organizational Choice Partial Participation Medical professionals may serve as consulting physicians Staff may or may not be present at ingestion, depending on agency policy May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 30 15

Organizational Choice Limited Participation Refer to supportive organizations, such as Compassion and Choices Staff not allowed to be present at time of ingestion May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 31 Organizational Choice No Participation Refuse to accept or serve patients pursuing the medication Refuse to allow staff to discuss option with patients Do not make referral to outside organization May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 32 16

Informed Consent Policy Patient right to receive accurate information Patient right to non-judgmental care Support self-determination Recognize the legality of the Act Patient made aware of level of organizational involvement May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 33 Staff Training Train on your policy Train on how to have patient-centered, not provider-centered conversations Explore the why behind the interest Assess for unmet needs Maintain non-judgmental body language/words/responses May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 34 17

Staff Opting Out Develop policy and process for staff to opt out of caring for patients who receive the medication Coordinate a smooth transition to other staff members May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 35 The HEB Experience Started with a task force comprised of hospice team members of all disciplines Purpose of task force was to explore their concerns and make recommendations for the agency policy Policy created by a sub-committee of the HEB Ethics Committee; best practice created separately Decided on Partial Participation May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 36 18

Staff/Volunteer Training Met with small groups (no more than 20) to discuss the agency policy and best practice Allowed for questions and concerns to be expressed May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 37 First Patients When staff members attended an EOLOA death, they returned to office to debrief with leadership. Purpose? Provide emotional support Learn about differences, if any Re-examine best practice and re-tool if necessary May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 38 19

Current Practice Not currently formally tracking number of patients Staff does not present EOLOA as an alternative, but support patient exploring Best practice: Staff going in pairs Continue to review and re-evaluate our practices May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 39 QUESTIONS? May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 40 20

Resources The Oregon Death with Dignity Act: A Guidebook for Healthcare Professionals, www.ohsuedu/xd/education/continuingeducation/center-for-ethicsoutreach/upload/oregon-death-with- Dignity-Act-Guidebook.pdf Dignity, Death & Dilemmas, Journal of Pain & Symptom Management, Vol 47, No. 1, pp. 137-153 www.endoflifeoption.org www.compassionandchoices.org May 10-12, 2016 CAHSAH 50th Anniversary Annual Conference 41 Speaker Information Susie Crandall, PhD, CHA VP, Agency Collaboration & Effectiveness Hospice East Bay 3470 Buskirk Ave., Pleasant Hill, CA 94523 925-887-5678 925-887-5679 susiec@hospiceeastbay.org hospiceeastbay.org May 22-24, 2018 CAHSAH CHAPCA Annual Conference 42 21