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<td><div id="centerContent"><p><strong>Public Health Emergency Preparedness</strong></p> <div class="headnote">
<p>This resource was part of AHRQ's Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) program, which was discontinued on June 30, 2011, in a realignment of Federal efforts. </p>
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<h2>Chapter 7. Palliative Care</h2>
<hr />
<p><em>By Anne M. Wilkinson, Ph.D., M.S., Co-lead Author,<sup><a href="#auth1">a</a></sup> Marianne Matzo, Ph.D., APRN, BC, FAAN, Co-lead Author,<sup><a href="#auth2">b</a></sup> Maria Gatto, M.A., APRN,<sup><a href="#auth3">c</a></sup> Joanne Lynn, M.D., M.A., M.S.<sup><a href="#auth4">d</a></sup> </em></p>
<p class="size2"><a name="auth1" id="auth1"></a><sup>a</sup> Senior Social Scientist, Palliative Care Policy Center, RAND Corporation<br />
<a name="auth2" id="auth2"></a><sup>b</sup> Professor Palliative Care, University of Oklahoma College of Nursing<br />
<a name="auth3" id="auth3"></a><sup>c</sup> Director of Palliative Care, Bon Secours Health System<br />
<a name="auth4" id="auth4"></a><sup>d</sup> Senior Natural Scientist,
RAND Corporation</p> <hr /><br />
<table width="90%" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="8" border="1">
<tr valign="top">
<td><p>This chapter addresses the overarching mass casualty planning issue of how to
provide optimal support for the dying, those facing life-limiting illness or injury,
and those caring for them. It defines palliative care and explores ways in which this
care can be integrated into initial planning and response (including health care
facilities and alternative care sites) for catastrophic events. The goal of this
section is to offer recommendations and considerations to help community planners
address palliative care in areas such as decisionmaking, communication,
supplies, resources, training, and personnel.</p></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<table width="90%" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="8" border="1">
<tr valign="top">
<td><h3>Palliative Care in the Context of a Mass Casualty Event (MCE):
Issues and Recommendations at a Glance</h3> <p><strong>Major Palliative Care-related Challenges</strong></p>
<p>The provision of palliative care in the context of an MCE is a new
component of disaster planning; there is a lack of understanding of
how to incorporate community-based health care, mental health and
social service professionals into planning efforts.</p> <p><strong>Recommendations for Planners</strong></p>
<p>Leadership:</p>
<ul>
<li>Request aid of disaster planning leadership at a national level
to engender a network of leaders in home health, palliative and hospice
care, and long-term care that will be engaged in disaster planning.</li>
</ul>
<p>Incorporating Palliative Care into MCE Planning</p>
<ul>
<li>Incorporate community-based long-term care and palliative care providers
in all phases of planning, response, and recovery as integral members
of the response team.</li>
<li>Integrate specific planning for those likely not to live long in
all established scenarios (&quot;all-hazards approach&quot;) and
established response plans. Include pediatric-specific palliative
care issues in planning.</li>
</ul>
<p>Training:</p>
<ul>
<li>Incorporate palliative care training for MCE responders as an
integral part of exercises, planning, and response, building on
existing disaster planning and command and control structures.</li>
</ul>
<p>Triage and Treatment Decisions:</p>
<ul>
<li>Work with first responder personnel and local and regional disaster
response planners (e.g., EMS, fire, police, departments of public
health, community health clinics, local and regional governmental
entities) to identify and develop clear guidelines and protocols
to address issues of:<ul>
<li>Triage.</li>
<li> Alternative care sites (ACSs) for palliative care.</li>
<li>What levels of care are to be delivered in what settings and by
whom.</li>
<li>Lines of authority and the clear identification of responsible
personnel.</li></ul>
</li></ul>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p class="size2"><a href="index.html#Contents">Return to Contents</a></p>
<h3><a name="Background" id="Background"></a>Background</h3>
<p>As was demonstrated with Hurricane Katrina, a catastrophic MCE overwhelms
all available personnel and resources, both locally and regionally. Other
large disasters (e.g., major hurricanes, &quot;dirty bombs,&quot; pandemic
influenza) also have the potential to overload the health care and social
service systems and disrupt existing services to persons who were already
seriously ill. Under conditions of massive injury and loss, and even in the
face of overwhelming economic and social disruption, human beings will be
called on to act humanely. In any disaster, the first priority will be to
save all those who can be saved and to reestablish societal structure. In
the event of a catastrophic MCE, it must be assumed that some people may survive
the onset of the disaster but will have incurred such serious illness or injury
that they will live only for a relatively short time. In addition, there will
be vulnerable individuals (e.g., the elderly in the community, those sick
in the hospital, those in nursing homes or group homes, the disabled, children)
who were already ill with severe preexisting conditions and who may
be negatively impacted by the resulting scarcity of resources. These individuals
will suffer harm disproportionately during or following a catastrophic MCE,
because they may not be able to seek help, care for themselves, or pursue other
survival and recovery strategies pursued by nonvulnerable populations.</p>
<table width="90%" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="8" border="1">
<tr valign="top">
<td><p>&quot;When the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the one, what
happens to the one?&quot;</p>
<p align="right">&#8212;Sally Phillips, R.N., Ph.D., Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality</p></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>The goal of an organized and coordinated response to a catastrophic MCE should
be to maximize the number of lives saved. At the same time, the goal also
should be to provide the greatest comfort and minimize the physical and psychological
suffering of those whose lives may be shortened as a result of either an immediate
surge of patients or long-term exposure following a catastrophic event.</p>
<p class="size2"><a href="index.html#Contents">Return to Contents</a></p>
<a name="ContextMCE" id="ContextMCE"></a>
<h3>Palliative Care in the Context of an MCE</h3>
<p>Under ordinary circumstances, about 1 to 2 percent of the population lives
at home or in long-term care facilities with serious illness, facing the last
phase of life.</p>
<p>Most scenarios of catastrophic MCEs would create sudden large numbers of
fatally injured or critically ill short-term survivors that are at least a
few orders of magnitude larger than the existing vulnerable populations. Depending
on the event, some victims will last only a few weeks (e.g., pulmonary injury
from airborne chemicals) and some may last for months (e.g., pandemic influenza).
In many cases, those who survive the onset usually will live for some time&#8212;days
to months&#8212;but will not be &quot;expected to survive&quot; due to the
event itself or to the ensuring resource scarcities it creates. Initial identification
of those who might fit into the &quot;not expected to survive&quot; category
following a catastrophic MCE may include: </p>
<ul>
<li>Those exposed to the event who are expected to die over the course of
weeks (e.g., those with radiation exposure)</li>
<li>The &quot;already existing&quot; palliative care population (e.g., those
already enrolled in hospice or receiving palliative care in acute care settings)</li>
<li>Vulnerable patients (e.g., advanced illness patients in long-term care
facilities) whose situation will be worsened due to scarcities associated
with the event</li>
<li>Patients who are triaged as a result of scarce resources.</li>
</ul>
<p>Those who are not expected to survive cannot be simply abandoned or ignored;
nor should they overwhelm hospitals and EMS. By including these populations
in existing disaster and MCE preparation, response, and management, most communities
can ensure humane palliative care for all affected by such disasters.</p>
<h4>What Is Palliative Care?</h4>
<p>Aggressive management of symptoms and relief of suffering is what generally
have come to be called &quot;palliative care.&quot; The World Health Organization
defines palliative care as &quot;an approach which improves the quality of
life of patients and their families facing life-threatening illness, through
the prevention, assessment, and treatment of pain and other physical, psychosocial,
and spiritual problems.&quot;</p>
<p><a name="Tab7.1" id="Tab7.1"></a>While it is important to understand what
palliative care is, it is also important to specify what palliative care is not.
Palliative care is not abandonment of the patient or reduction or elimination of
treatment. Rather, it involves active treatment for symptom management and support
to address the comfort of the patients and their families. Finally, the aggressive
and appropriate treatment of pain and other symptoms is not euthanasia; nor does
it &quot;hasten death&quot; (Go to <a href="mcetab7-1.htm">Table 7.1</a>). The application of palliative
care principles in an MCE would include:</p>
<ul>
<li>Recognizing that initial prognostication may change if additional resources
become available or if the situation deteriorates.</li>
<li>Honoring the humanity of the dying and those who serve them (whether
loved ones, professionals, or strangers) by providing comfort and social,
psychological, and spiritual support.</li>
</ul>
<table width="90%" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="8" border="1">
<tr valign="top">
<td><p><strong>The National Consensus Project for Quality Palliative
Care </strong>states that palliative care focuses on the relief of suffering
and distress for people facing serious, life-limiting illness to help
them and their families to have the best possible quality of life, regardless
of the stage of the disease or the need for other therapies. Palliative
care is both a philosophy of care and an organized, highly structured
system for delivering care. Palliative care expands traditional disease-model
medical treatments to include the goals of enhancing quality of life
for patient and family, optimizing function, helping with decisionmaking,
and providing opportunities for personal growth. As such, it can be
delivered concurrently with life-prolonging care or as the main focus
of care.</p></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>In an MCE, standards of care will require adaptation, unfamiliar personnel
will be providing services, supplies will be strained, and command and control
lines of authority will need to be established. In the interest of maximizing
good outcomes for as many patients as possible, and at the very least, providing
palliative care to all, treatment decisions will have to balance utilitarian
notions against other ethical values, with medical effectiveness as a key
determinant. Priority access to scarce resources, including structural and
skilled personnel resources, may be applied or moved to those with the greatest
potential for survival. Thus, services to those expected to die soon will
fall more heavily on people who do not have substantial prior health experience
and expertise.</p>
<table width="90%" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="8" border="1">
<tr valign="top">
<td><p>&quot;The needs of those who may not survive catastrophic
mass casualty events and the 'existing' vulnerable populations
affected by the event should be incorporated into the planning, preparation,
response, and recovery management systems of all regions and jurisdictions.&quot;</p>
<p align="right">&#8212;Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations, 2004</p> </td>
</tr>
</table>
<h4>What Services Will Be Needed? </h4>
<p>The need to care for the dying in times of
calamity has been a small part of military medicine for a long time: chaplains
and morphine are standard issue in field operations.
In addition, the need to care for the dying in routine civilian medical care
has come to the fore with the advent of large numbers of people who live with
serious chronic illness and increasing disability for a substantial time before
dying. Optimal support of potential survivors, the dying, and those whose
vulnerability or frailty will be exacerbated by the event itself depends,
in part, on having done a good job in planning for the inevitability of mass
casualties throughout the time of the disaster. Crafting services that enable
comfort, support longevity, and permit meaningful activities and relationships
has been a major commitment of modern health care and consolidated under the
label &quot;palliative and supportive care.&quot;</p>
<h3><a name="Challenges" id="Challenges"></a>Major Palliative Care-related Challenges</h3>
<p>Community planners face several significant challenges in the integration
of palliative care services and personnel into MCE response planning. First,
the provision of palliative care in the context of an MCE is a new component
of disaster planning. As such, there is a dearth of literature and expertise
on the subject of palliative care in the context of an MCE. Second, palliative
care, long-term care, and home care are already resource poor; thus, identifying
and securing funding for palliative care services will be a significant challenge.
Third, there is a lack of understanding of the potential utility of incorporating
community-based health care, mental health, and social service professionals
into MCE response planning efforts&#8212;even by the professionals themselves.
Finally, there is a significant lack of public awareness regarding the limitations
of the health care system under austere circumstances.</p>
<h3><a name="Integration" id="Integration"></a>Integration of Palliative Care
Services into MCE Planning and Response</h3>
<p>The palliative care service aspect of community preparedness is new to disaster
planning in the United States. Without deliberate planning and direction,
stocking up on appropriate supplies, and the development of realistic guidelines,
supportive care services for the dying in MCEs will be erratic, inefficient,
disruptive, and potentially indefensible as the basis for social reorganization
after the disaster.</p>
<p>In most disaster scenarios, the priority concern is for survivors. In situations
of the scale of the Oklahoma City or World Trade Center bombings, the local
health and social service systems were able to respond to the relatively small
numbers of seriously injured and modest disruptions to supportive care and community
services for the existing population. In recent catastrophic events such as
Hurricane Katrina, however, there were massive disruptions to local and regional
response capabilities, and large numbers of critically ill survivors with few
resources to respond to them. </p>
<h3><a name="Actions" id="Actions"></a>Recommended Actions and Potential Barriers</h3>
<h4>Leadership</h4>
<p>Knowledgeable professionals and organizations (e.g., geriatricians, palliative
care clinicians, long-term care providers and organizations, home health providers,
hospice providers) should be integrated into current local, State, and regional
disaster preparedness planning to bring the palliative care perspective. </p>
<p>Recommended actions include:</p>
<ul>
<li> Build on existing relationships.</li>
<li>Have State and local home health, hospice,
and long-term care organizations and professional associations contact leaders
in their State and regional-area disaster preparedness planning bodies to
get involved in these activities/processes.</li>
<li> Have disaster planning leadership at a national level help to engender
a network of leaders in home health, palliative and hospice care, and long-term
care to be engaged in disaster planning, supported by appropriate research
support and development expertise, so that promising ideas are quickly shared
and tested and so that cross-region support is available in times of crisis.</li>
</ul>
<p>As
noted earlier, the barriers to implementing these recommendations involve
the fact that palliative care, long-term care, and home care are already resource
poor; there is a lack of understanding of the potential utility of incorporating
community-based health care, mental health, and social service professionals
into planning, even by the professionals themselves; and there is a dearth
of literature and expertise on the subject.</p>
<h4>Roles of Palliative Care Services in Various Disaster Scenarios</h4>
<p> The role of palliative care and the resources needed to incorporate it into
disaster response must be anticipated and fully incorporated into the current
State and local disaster planning/training guidelines, protocols, and activities.</p>
<p>Recommended actions include:</p>
<ul>
<li> Base planning on lessons learned from previous disasters (including war).</li>
<li> Establish practical measures of success in palliative care services in
MCEs.</li>
<li>Conduct &quot;gap analyses&quot; and existing tabletop exercises of
how to integrate palliative care services into local, State, and regional
systems.</li>
<li>Integrate specific planning for those likely not to live long in all
established scenarios (&quot;all hazards approach&quot;) and established
response plans (e.g., link to local, regional, and State plans and agencies
such as joint field offices and local emergency planning committees; link
to the National Incident Management System and the National Response Plan).
</li>
<li> Incorporate community-based long-term care and palliative
care providers in all phases of planning, response, and recovery as
integral members of the response team.
</li>
<li> Encourage attention to the needs of those with expected short survival
in all four phases of emergency management (prevention, preparation,
response, recovery) and in all relevant settings (prehospital, acute care
hospital, and ACS).
</li>
<li> Include pediatric-specific palliative care issues in all plans; failure to
do so will hamper the ability of health care workers to move children
into palliative care and develop guidelines for treating them.
</li>
</ul>
<p>The barriers to integrating palliative care services into MCE planning and
response include substantial differences of perspective between palliative
care providers and other planners; for example, there may be differences in
perceptions between providing comfort and dignity and enhancing survival,
even though these are often intertwined.</p><a id="Fig7.1" name="Fig7.1"></a>
<h4>Triage and Treatment Decisions for Those Likely to Die</h4>
<p>A model of triage and response for victims
of an MCE and the potential impacts on the prevailing health and social service
system is depicted in <a href="mcefig7-1.htm">Figure 7.1</a>.</p>
<p>Casualties would fall under three general categories: those unscathed by the
event or too well to require emergency medical treatment, those too sick or
injured to survive days or weeks, and those deemed appropriate for acute medical
treatment and transport to an acute medical care facility. In addition, the
existing &quot;vulnerable&quot; population likely will be affected by the
event or the resulting disruption to their support system and may become palliative
care patients due to the scarcity of resources. These patients also would
be triaged over time to one or more of the casualty categories and casualty
treatment sites, as their condition either worsens or improves.</p>
<p>In the event of a catastrophic MCE, casualties will be triaged at the site
of the incident and again after transport to an ACS. Some will be deemed
&quot;likely to die&quot; during the extreme circumstances of the catastrophe
and therefore will be triaged not to receive (or not to continue to receive)
life-supporting treatment. For these casualties, death will be expected within
a short period.</p>
<p>This reality poses substantial challenges for all involved, including the
recognition that some people who might survive under other circumstances now
will die. Given the usual focus of rescue in manageable disaster events, most
patients, families, and emergency responders are likely to resist this designation
and attempt to save all, potentially exacerbating an already overwhelmed medical
care system. Thus, ACS and providers need to be identified and used for this
population during catastrophic MCEs.</p>
<p> Recommended actions include:</p>
<ul>
<li>Build smooth links with supportive service organizations and personnel
(e.g., home health, long-term care settings, hospice and palliative care
providers) for those expected to die as part of catastrophic MCE response
plans.</li>
<li> Work with first responder personnel and local and regional disaster response
planners (e.g., EMS, fire, police, departments of public health, community
health clinics, local and regional governmental entities) to identify and
develop clear guidelines and protocols to address issues of:<ul>
<li>Triage.</li>
<li>ACSs for palliative care. </li>
<li>Who delivers treatment and support (e.g., spiritual, psychological)
and how.</li>
<li>What levels of care are to be delivered in what settings and by
whom.</li>
<li>Lines of authority and the clear identification of responsible
personnel. </li>
<li>Identification of location and use of stockpiles, supplies, and
personal protection equipment.</li>
<li>Training of providers for the provision of appropriate palliative
care at all care treatment sites.</li>
</ul></li>
<li>Disseminating guidebooks for the roles and activities involved.</li>
<li> Building strong support for triage and standards of care to respond to
dire circumstances or scarce resources by redefining public expectations
and training of palliative care and other health professionals. Actions
would include:<ul>
<li>Build in flexible methods of response for revising triage decisions
and treatment when affected persons are doing better than expected.</li>
<li>Build in psychological and ethical support for front-line responders.</li>
<li>Expect anxiety and strong emotions, including mental illness and
criminal activity, and having security and appropriate medications
available.</li>
<li>Establish guidelines and protocols for &quot;just-in-time&quot; training
and palliative service delivery of secondary providers at all treatment
sites (e.g., the location of the event, alternative treatment sites,
acute care hospitals, secondary referral sites such as nursing homes).</li>
</ul></li>
</ul>
<p>Barriers include public resistance to the overt rationing of health care
resources. It is the role of the popular media and public health agencies
to enhance public understanding regarding the limitations of the health care
system under dire circumstances.</p>
<h4>Medical Supplies and Equipment</h4>
<p>Supply arrangements must be identified as part of the community planning
effort not only to ensure that all potential palliative care supply sources
are included, but to prevent multiple organizations from unknowingly relying
on the same suppliers. Resources include people, equipment, food, and medical
supplies. Mutual aid agreements should be made ahead of time with community
agencies, other health care providers, and backup suppliers to ensure that
resource needs for palliative care service delivery can be met.</p>
<p> Recommended actions include:</p>
<ul>
<li>Stockpile palliative care medications in each community for disaster response,
including injectible morphine and dihydromorphone, injectible haloperidol,
subcutaneous butterfly needles, tegaderm, antipyretics, steroids, and diuretics.</li>
<li> Plan for the needs of individuals chronically dependent on dialysis,
ventilators, or other special supplies such as dressings, splints, syringes
and oral droppers, incontinence supplies, beds or cushioned surfaces, and
personal protective devices.</li>
</ul>
<p>Barriers will include the need to stock supplies near the settings of service
and preferably distant from hospitals and other sites of definitive care for
survival. Long-term care facilities, inpatient hospice settings, or home nursing
care offices are possibilities. Having controlled substances in strong lockboxes
is probably most naturally sited at nursing homes, where systems are in place
and storage of these drugs is already set up. Another option would be designated
pharmacies. The effectiveness of these two options obviously would depend
on their proximity to the disaster scene.</p>
<h4>Training</h4>
<p>Training in palliative care must occur prior to an MCE and will involve many
layers of education and practice. Planners can incorporate experts now working
with seriously chronically ill persons to be mobilized to serve those who
might live and who are seriously ill. Thus, many of the physicians, nurses,
and therapists who regularly serve the disabled or elderly will be needed
to provide life-extending treatments. Planners could designate in advance
certain leadership to remain in place and mobilize retired professionals and
layperson volunteers.</p>
<p> Communities now provide Community Emergency Response Team training to engage
citizens in community and family preparedness through public education, outreach,
and training. Building on existing models of emergency response training,
the planning team should identify a variety of training methodologies to incorporate
palliative care services training for all disaster response members.</p>
<p>Cross-training of personnel from other areas (of expertise as well as from
other areas of the country to provide &quot;mutual aid&quot; to the stressed
community/region) will be important. In addition, laypeople should be recruited
to serve (e.g., bus drivers, mail deliverers, anyone from the community who
is willing to attend the training) due to the inevitable surge in demand for
assistance that an MCE will engender. Moreover, education and training should
be competency based, with programming specific to the individual's role
in emergency response.</p>
<p>Recommended actions include the following:</p>
<ul>
<li>Incorporate palliative care training
for first responders as an integral part of disaster and MCE preplanning
and practice of events and response, which will build on existing disaster
planning and command and control structures.</li>
<li> Develop and implement competency-based evaluation and measurement.</li>
<li>Identify
cross-training opportunities of local and regional first responders along
with integrated palliative care professionals.</li>
</ul>
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