4.4 Review

Personalizing the Setting of Palliative Care Delivery for Patients with Advanced Cancer: Care Anywhere, Anytime

Journal

CURRENT TREATMENT OPTIONS IN ONCOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 1, Pages 1-11

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11864-022-01044-1

Keywords

Ambulatory care; Delivery of care; integrated; Home care services; Inpatients; Palliative care; Telemedicine

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The specialty of palliative care has evolved to provide symptom management, psychosocial support, and care planning for cancer patients. This review examines the delivery and impact of palliative care in outpatient, inpatient, and community-based settings. It discusses how these three branches of palliative care can work together to optimize patient outcomes under a unified model.
Opinion statementThe specialty of palliative care has evolved over time to provide symptom management, psychosocial support, and care planning for patients with cancer throughout the disease continuum and in multiple care settings. This review examines the delivery and impact of palliative care in the outpatient, inpatient, and community-based settings. The article will discuss how these 3 palliative care settings can work together to optimize patient outcomes under a unifying model of palliative care anywhere, anytime and how to prioritize palliative care services when resources are limited. Many patients with advanced cancer receive care from each of the 3 branches of palliative care-outpatient, inpatient, and community-based settings-at some point along their disease trajectory. Early on, outpatient clinics provide longitudinal supportive care concurrent with active disease-modifying treatments. Telemedicine appointments can serve patients remotely to minimize their need to travel. When patients experience functional decline, community-based palliative care services can provide support and monitoring for patients at home. When patients develop acute symptomatic complications requiring admission, inpatient care consultation teams are essential for symptom management and goals-of-care discussions. For patients in severe distress, receiving care in a palliative care unit that provides intensive symptom control and facilitates complex discharge planning is ideal. Under a unifying model of palliative care designed to offer care anywhere, anytime, the 3 branches of palliative care could work in unison to support each other, minimize gaps in care, and optimize patient outcomes.

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