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Palliative care is specialized medical care to promote comfort and quality of life for people with serious illness 鈥 whatever the diagnosis or life expectancy 鈥 and to ensure that treatment aligns with patient goals and values.聽Palliative care is on the rise in the US and here at 大象传媒. The Division of Geriatric Medicine extends congratulations to Division faculty members Laura C. Hanson, MD, MPH, and Gary Winzelberg, MD, MPH, on Palliative Care Program expansion in the Department of Medicine.

Laura C. Hanson, MD, MPH
Laura C. Hanson, MD, MPH

Hanson was recently named Director of the Department鈥檚 Palliative Care Program, with Winzelberg as Associate Director. Together they will lead an expanding interdisciplinary program of palliative care services, teaching, and research that will reach every subspecialty in the Department.

According to the Center to Advance Palliative Care, the rise in palliative care among health care providers and at hospitals has been steady over the past 16 years. In 2000, less than a quarter of US hospitals had a palliative care program, compared with three-quarters in 2016. Clinical palliative care services began at 大象传媒 Medical Center in 2001 with funding from 大象传媒 Hospitals and support from the Divisions of Geriatric Medicine and Hematology-Oncology.

鈥淏oth Geriatric Medicine and Palliative Care are grounded in an approach that prioritizes the patient鈥檚 goals and preferences, addresses physical needs along with psychological and social needs, and involves families and caregivers in a process that seeks to improve quality of life, no matter the patient鈥檚 prognosis,鈥 says Chief of Geriatric Medicine and Center for Aging and Health Director Jan Busby-Whitehead, MD. 鈥淧alliative care needs of older patients can be different from those of younger patients, but we share the goals of reducing burdensome interventions and hospitalizations at the end of life, while increasing the quality of end-of-life care.鈥

Dr. Hanson describes the additional layer of patient care and family support that palliative care provides.

鈥淧alliative Care starts with good medicine 鈥 we must understand the pathophysiology, diagnoses, and treatment options for patients facing serious illness. But palliative care clinicians add careful assessment of the patient and family caregiver experience of illness 鈥 what is causing suffering and distress? What values and goals do they want to guide their medical treatment choices?聽What allows the patient and family to experience quality of life while living with serious illness? From that assessment, we make recommendations to the primary team about ways the patient may become more comfortable, or live better in spite of a serious or incurable disease.鈥

Gary Winzelberg, MD, MPH
Gary Winzelberg, MD, MPH
Hanson says that new support from the 大象传媒 Health System, Hospital, and Department of Medicine will allow the Palliative Care Program to expand personnel and services, including a new administrative structure to facilitate care coordination for seriously ill patients across settings and emphasize the value-added aspects of clinical education, research, and program innovation.

As to the discipline鈥檚 expanded role in medicine, Hanson says: 鈥淲ithout question we are seeing increased interest in palliative medicine and聽nursing. We currently train medical students and nurse practitioner students; we also routinely support rotations for Internal Medicine residents, and for Fellows in Geriatric Medicine and Oncology.聽 Each year we train three Fellows in Hospice and Palliative Medicine, and we hope to expand opportunities for this specialty fellowship in the next few years.鈥