Session Type
Meeting
Search Results for CARE PLAN
Oral Presentations
Hospital Medicine 2017, May 1-4, 2017; Las Vegas, Nev.
Background: Advance care planning can be challenging for both patients and providers. Barriers to understanding patients’ goals of care include patient and provider discomfort with the topic, as well as family and cultural dynamics. The Stanford Letter Advance Directive (LAD) is a simple tool written at a fifth grade reading level in eight different languages […]
Oral Presentations
Hospital Medicine 2017, May 1-4, 2017; Las Vegas, Nev.
Background: Advance care planning can be challenging for both patients and providers. Barriers to understanding patients’ goals of care include patient and provider discomfort with the topic, as well as family and cultural dynamics. The Stanford Letter Advance Directive (LAD) is a simple tool written at a fifth grade reading level in eight different languages […]
Abstract Number: 8
Hospital Medicine 2017, May 1-4, 2017; Las Vegas, Nev.
Background: Substantial portions of hospitalized patients in the United States do not understand their plan of care. Hospitalized patients’ knowledge of their plan of care affects their ability to provide truly informed consent and assent to inpatient treatment, and to assume their medical care after discharge. There is a need for further study of the […]
Abstract Number: 16
Hospital Medicine 2017, May 1-4, 2017; Las Vegas, Nev.
Background: Advance care planning is nationally recognized as important for honoring patient wishes at the end of life. Despite this widespread recognition, many patients lack advance care planning and spend their last days in ways not concordant with their values. Moreover, traditional advance directives may provide only a partial context for patients’ belief systems relevant […]
Abstract Number: 21
SHM Converge 2021
Background: Hospitalists commonly discuss advance care planning (ACP), which supports patients in understanding and expressing their values for medical care during serious illness. The coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has increased the urgency of these conversations, especially for patients with older age, comorbidities, or an otherwise high risk for complications such as ICU admission, […]
Abstract Number: 22
Hospital Medicine 2020, Virtual Competition
Background: Hospitalists often care for patients with serious illness and commonly review and discuss advance care planning (ACP). Documented ACP conversations can be difficult to access in the electronic health record (EHR) due to the lack of a centralized location for ACP documentation and individual clinician practice variation leading to ACP documentation existing in multiple […]
Abstract Number: 51
Hospital Medicine 2019, March 24-27, National Harbor, Md.
Background: Frequently hospitalized patients represent a vulnerable population due to discontinuity between episodes of inpatient, outpatient, and specialty care. This discontinuity puts patients at risk for unnecessary over-treatment, dangerous under-treatment, medication errors, and loss of trust due to conflicting messages from healthcare providers. Providers face rising clinical volumes, decreasing familiarity between providers, and ever more […]
Abstract Number: 68
Hospital Medicine 2020, Virtual Competition
Background: Introduction : A Medical Orders for Scope of Treatment (MOST) form, adopted by the state of Texas in 2014, is similar to Physician Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment (POLST/MOLST) form in other states. It translates patient preferences for CPR, critical care, assisted nutrition, and transfer between healthcare facilities into a physician order set. Previous […]
Abstract Number: 69
SHM Converge 2023
Background: Despite benefits of early Serious Illness Conversations (SICs), including increased satisfaction and earlier hospice referral, rates of SICs remain low. The primary aim of this study is to assess if standardized documentation of SICs increase following implementation of interventions for providers to have more of these conversations with patients admitted to a general medicine […]
Abstract Number: 73
Hospital Medicine 2017, May 1-4, 2017; Las Vegas, Nev.
Background: The UCLA Department of Medicine (DOM) Rapid Mortality Review (RMR) is an innovative in-person, near real-time review of all deaths to capture the unique insight of the care providers into aspects of end-of-life care quality that otherwise go undocumented and unreported. The purpose of this study is to examine characteristics of mortality cases that […]