Survival Guide for Palliative Care RNs
by Jill Laird, RN, MS, RCNS, and Sharol Herr RN, BSN, MS
Two nurse leaders offer their top tips
1. Set up routine processes and algorithms so nurses can more easily make decisions about treating immediate patient needs.
The most effective nurses are the best-supported nurses. Providing
proper training and developing routine processes and algorithms empower
nurses to make decisions about treatment when appropriate.
Opportunities for quick physician consultation also provides nurses
with the support they need.
At Mount Carmel Health System, nurses interact with physicians five
days a week in daily rounds. There are weekly interdisciplinary team
meetings that further strengthen this interdisciplinary collaboration.
At the meetings, the team discusses cases in more detail, shares
information, solves problems and learns from each member. A palliative
care physician is on-call 24 hours per day, seven days per week.
At Massey Cancer Center, there are 18 evidence-based algorithms in
place which are reviewed every year and approved by the attending
physicians for palliative care patients on our unit. Trained nurses on
the unit can use the algorithms to promptly treat dsypnea, anxiety or
pain, for example, which makes them better able to respond quickly to
patient and family needs. Patients get immediate treatment and positive
outcomes without needing to wait for the doctor. The nursing staff
knows they are giving the right treatment in a timely fashion.
To view the algorithms, visit http://www.capc.org/signup (E-mail
address registration required to access tools.)
2. Create a culture of flexibility and responsiveness to patient
needs.
Even with good processes and procedures in place, there may be
uncertainty and gray areas. For instance, understanding a patient's
goals of care can be time consuming and complex. However, these
conversations are critical to providing appropriate care. By focusing
on and setting a patient's goals of care, it's much easier to know how
to proceed. If you're wondering whether to draw a lab on a patient or
provide antibiotics to an elderly person with aspiration pneumonia,
there is no right or wrong textbook answer. The answers should be
determined by whether these actions meet the goals of care.
Guidelines in a unit or on a service are necessary, but they should not
be viewed as hard and fast rules. Here are two cases from Massey Cancer
Center to illustrate the point:
* Massey Cancer Center doesn't usually allow overnight visits
by children, but a nine-year-old slept with his mom on the unit two
days before she died. That was the right thing to do in that
situation.
* In another case, Massey Cancer Center made an exception to the usual
rule of extubation before transfer to the unit. The case involved a
38-year-old father from the ICU who'd been in a motor vehicle accident.
The ICU team feared that he might die immediately from removal of the
tube. By leaving it in, he had 24 hours in a supportive environment
with his wife and daughter.
3. Think beyond hospital walls to the broader continuum of care.
Hospitals need to think beyond their own walls when devising a good
palliative care plan for a patient. Nurses should ask, "What is
realistic in terms of caregiving, finances and outcomes outside the
hospital?" Patients and families need education on their options. Build
those outside options and agencies into the plan of care, and
communicate with receiving agencies. In order to ensure an orderly
transition from one setting to another, patients' medical information
and reports should be sent to the appropriate outside agencies.
4. Build in a support structure of nursing staff to prevent
burnout.
An improperly structured palliative care team can lead to nurse
burnout. It is critical to have adequate staffing and an
interdisciplinary team with a high degree of collaboration to help
mitigate burnout. The support and collaboration of the
interdisciplinary team alleviates the perception by nurses who often
think and feel they are saving the world by themselves.
Prepare staff through education and training. Teach staff communication
skills and how to have difficult conversations. Providing the
appropriate tools nurses need to take care of patients greatly impacts
the ability for them to continue their work.
Obtain administrative buy-in and support. When leaders in the
organization value what nurses are doing there is a sense of esprit de
corps among the staff. When all staff is doing the same thing - giving
the right care at the same time - it is rewarding and people feel a
sense of connection and purpose, which improves retention and reduces
burnout.
At Massey Cancer Center, an annual memorial service with family members
is a very rewarding event for everyone. They also hold an annual staff
retreat where the interdisciplinary team spends a day off the unit,
further developing relationships and team building. The best services
are those with a close-knit group of nurses who look out for each
other. Encourage nurses to use their vacation time and make it easy for
them to take it when they need it. Help them find sources of
relaxation. The chaos of the average day can be hard, so it's important
to get mental and emotional breaks.
About the Author
For more information on PCLCs, visit http://w
ww.capc.org/palliative-care-leadership-initiative/
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