1. The Creation of a Psychiatry-Palliative Care Liaison Team: Using Psychiatrists to Extend Palliative Care Delivery and Access During the COVID-19 Crisis
- Author
-
Oliver M. Stroeh, Daniel Shalev, Melissa R. Arbuckle, Rebecca Rendleman, Peter A. Shapiro, Craig D. Blinderman, and Shunichi Nakagawa
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,workforce ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Columbia university ,Clinical Neurology ,Context (language use) ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Betacoronavirus ,0302 clinical medicine ,Acute care ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Psychiatry ,Pandemics ,General Nursing ,Service (business) ,Patient Care Team ,primary palliative care ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Palliative Care ,COVID-19 ,Psychotherapy ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Workforce ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Early phase ,Coronavirus Infections ,Delivery of Health Care - Abstract
Context During the course of March and April 2020, New York City experienced a surge of a 170,000 coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases, overwhelming hospital systems and leading to an unprecedented need for palliative care services. Objectives To present a model for rapid palliative care workforce expansion under crisis conditions, using supervised advanced psychiatry trainees to provide primary palliative services in the acute care and emergency setting. Methods In response to the New York City COVID-19 surge, advanced psychiatry trainees at New York-Presbyterian Columbia University Irving Medical Center were rapidly trained and redeployed to a newly formed psychiatry-palliative care liaison team. Under the supervision of consultation-liaison psychiatrists (who also served as team coordinators), these trainees provided circumscribed palliative care services to patients and/or their families, including goals-of-care discussions and psychosocial support. Palliative care attendings remained available to all team members for more advanced and specialized supervision. Results The psychiatry-palliative care liaison team effectively provided palliative care services during the early phase and peak of New York City's COVID-19 crisis, managing up to 16 new cases per day and provided longitudinal follow-up, thereby enabling palliative care specialists to focus on providing services requiring specialist-level palliative care expertise. Conclusion By training and supervising psychiatrists and advanced psychiatry trainees in specific palliative care roles, palliative care teams could more effectively meet markedly increased service needs of varying complexity during the COVID-19 crisis. As new geographic regions experience possible COVID-19 surges in the coming months, this may serve as a model for rapidly increasing palliative care workforce.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF