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Background: Tele-palliative care is an effective method of providing care for patients who wish to receive their care locally. In an effort to provide care to veterans that live remotely the Palliative Care program at the Pittsburgh VAMC created a Palliative Care Telemedicine clinic. The clinic provides a patient centered approach by working with primary care and subspecialists to manage symptoms, establish patient’s expectations with treatment and to determine what the patient is willing to endure to reach his/her goals. Patient focused care provides better quality of care and may result in a decrease in unwanted and inappropriate admissions, readmissions, tests, procedures and transfers to a higher level of care that may not align with the patient’s goals of care.

Methods: In 2018 the Palliative Care program partnered with Oncology to provide comprehensive patient care by CVT. Patients who requested that their chemotherapy/ immunotherapy be done at the local VA were seen by Oncology in Pittsburgh with subsequent visits and treatment done in the infusion clinic at the local VA. Patients were seen by Oncology by CVT prior to each treatment, Patients with stage IV disease or who had extensive symptom burden were referred for telepalliative care and were seen on the same day that they were seen by their Oncologist.

Results: Since 2018, 51 patients with the diagnosis of cancer were referred for both Oncology and Palliative Care CVT. There were a total of 211 clinic visits. Patents were primarily referred for symptom management and goals of care. Since January 2018, 22 patients are alive, 24 patients have died and 5 patients are currently receiving hospice care. 21 patients died at home or in a CLC—1 died in the hospital and 2 sites of death are unknown.

Conclusion: Preliminary data suggests that tele-palliative care can provide effective symptom management and may reduce deaths in an acute care setting. The palliative care program plans to expand tele-palliative care by offering this service to other facilities in the VISN as well as partnering with home hospice agencies to provide VVC for patients that are on hospice.

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Correspondence: Sandra Blakowski ([email protected])

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Correspondence: Sandra Blakowski ([email protected])

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Correspondence: Sandra Blakowski ([email protected])

Background: Tele-palliative care is an effective method of providing care for patients who wish to receive their care locally. In an effort to provide care to veterans that live remotely the Palliative Care program at the Pittsburgh VAMC created a Palliative Care Telemedicine clinic. The clinic provides a patient centered approach by working with primary care and subspecialists to manage symptoms, establish patient’s expectations with treatment and to determine what the patient is willing to endure to reach his/her goals. Patient focused care provides better quality of care and may result in a decrease in unwanted and inappropriate admissions, readmissions, tests, procedures and transfers to a higher level of care that may not align with the patient’s goals of care.

Methods: In 2018 the Palliative Care program partnered with Oncology to provide comprehensive patient care by CVT. Patients who requested that their chemotherapy/ immunotherapy be done at the local VA were seen by Oncology in Pittsburgh with subsequent visits and treatment done in the infusion clinic at the local VA. Patients were seen by Oncology by CVT prior to each treatment, Patients with stage IV disease or who had extensive symptom burden were referred for telepalliative care and were seen on the same day that they were seen by their Oncologist.

Results: Since 2018, 51 patients with the diagnosis of cancer were referred for both Oncology and Palliative Care CVT. There were a total of 211 clinic visits. Patents were primarily referred for symptom management and goals of care. Since January 2018, 22 patients are alive, 24 patients have died and 5 patients are currently receiving hospice care. 21 patients died at home or in a CLC—1 died in the hospital and 2 sites of death are unknown.

Conclusion: Preliminary data suggests that tele-palliative care can provide effective symptom management and may reduce deaths in an acute care setting. The palliative care program plans to expand tele-palliative care by offering this service to other facilities in the VISN as well as partnering with home hospice agencies to provide VVC for patients that are on hospice.

Background: Tele-palliative care is an effective method of providing care for patients who wish to receive their care locally. In an effort to provide care to veterans that live remotely the Palliative Care program at the Pittsburgh VAMC created a Palliative Care Telemedicine clinic. The clinic provides a patient centered approach by working with primary care and subspecialists to manage symptoms, establish patient’s expectations with treatment and to determine what the patient is willing to endure to reach his/her goals. Patient focused care provides better quality of care and may result in a decrease in unwanted and inappropriate admissions, readmissions, tests, procedures and transfers to a higher level of care that may not align with the patient’s goals of care.

Methods: In 2018 the Palliative Care program partnered with Oncology to provide comprehensive patient care by CVT. Patients who requested that their chemotherapy/ immunotherapy be done at the local VA were seen by Oncology in Pittsburgh with subsequent visits and treatment done in the infusion clinic at the local VA. Patients were seen by Oncology by CVT prior to each treatment, Patients with stage IV disease or who had extensive symptom burden were referred for telepalliative care and were seen on the same day that they were seen by their Oncologist.

Results: Since 2018, 51 patients with the diagnosis of cancer were referred for both Oncology and Palliative Care CVT. There were a total of 211 clinic visits. Patents were primarily referred for symptom management and goals of care. Since January 2018, 22 patients are alive, 24 patients have died and 5 patients are currently receiving hospice care. 21 patients died at home or in a CLC—1 died in the hospital and 2 sites of death are unknown.

Conclusion: Preliminary data suggests that tele-palliative care can provide effective symptom management and may reduce deaths in an acute care setting. The palliative care program plans to expand tele-palliative care by offering this service to other facilities in the VISN as well as partnering with home hospice agencies to provide VVC for patients that are on hospice.

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Abstract Presented at the 2019 Association of VA Hematology/Oncology Annual Meeting
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