ALS Patients & Families Paula Brockenbrough, CRT Hattie Figgers, MSW What is ALS? Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis • A progressive neurodegenerative disease that affects nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord • ALS is also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, named after New York Yankees baseball player Lou Gehrig • Patients experience progressive loss of voluntary movements and muscle control • Patients lose the ability to speak, eat, move, and breath • Life expectancy of a person with ALS averages 2-5 years from time of diagnosis • ALS occurs throughout the world with no racial, ethnic, or socioeconomic boundaries 1 Respiratory Therapist & ALS Clinic • John Burke, retired from Army • Served in World War II and Korean War Officer • Military Veterans are approximately twice as likely to develop ALS. Diagnosis • Patients typically see multiple physicians prior to being diagnosed with ALS • From time of symptoms to diagnosis average almost 12 months in some studies • Up to 44% of time neurologists miss the ALS diagnosis despite a diagnostic criteria established in 1994 (Cristini: JAAPA 2006) • Timeliness of diagnosis critical in disease that is rapidly progressing • Patient has a right to know the truth as soon as possible • Gives the patient an opportunity to join clinical trials before advanced disease rules them out • The possibility that pharmacologic therapy may be more effective • Patient and family can have time to cope with diagnosis and subsequent issues: psychological, medical (mobility, breathing, eating), and death 2 Initial Meeting after Diagnosis • Straight forward and honest communication is essential • Present information in language appropriate to the patient • Every step is explained (PMH, respiratory muscle testing, recommendations, etc.) • ALS clinic book with explanations of every discipline at the clinic and contact information Importance of Communication • Introduce yourself to everyone in the room • Sit on rolling chair in front of patient • Maintain eye contact throughout conversation • Personalize the time you have with them • Always ask patients open ended questions, no yes/no questions • NO COMPUTER CHARTING IN THE ROOM 3 Mentors Thomas Smith, M.D. Palliative Medicine Professor of Oncology Johns Hopkins University Pat Coyne, MSN Discussion of Death • Willingness of medical team to discuss death openly with patients and their families is of the upmost importance • Open and honest discussion about death ensures optimal care and alleviates patient and family concerns • Patients need the comfort and information that the willingness to talk gives them • LISTENING!! • Asking what the patients are fearful of gives them an opportunity to talk about the dying process • Ask patients what is important to them; what do they want to experience, see, do, etc. • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDWUaXxQJzc 4 Team Approach to Death • We meet as a team to discuss what patients and families need for the appointment • The entire team is willing to meet with the patient and family as a unit if that is what the patient wants • Every team member encourages questions • SILENCE IS IMPORTANT! • Never a “one time event” to talk about dying, discussion is fluid • Critical to have a home care team of respiratory therapists, nurses, PT/OT, and speech therapists who are also willing to answer questions about care and death • The clinic team is given the opportunity to say “goodbye” to the patient The Role of Humor • Humor has been shown to reduce anxiety • Narrows the interpersonal gaps between patients and the interdisciplinary team • Communicates caring for the patient as a person • Allows the patient to joke back, which can reveal hidden agendas • Allows for openings for further discourse of deeper concerns (suicide) • Patients and families see the clinic team as their support 5 Strong Leadership • Strong leadership of medical director helps with grief and lessens compassion fatigue • Time and process of death was expected and peaceful • Medical and ethical decisions are discussed at length as a team • Communication with patient/family and team is ongoing and effective Scott Vota, M.D. Jason Wong, M.D. Clinic Staff & Coping • “Don't cry in empty rooms or stairwells- cry in public and let patients and staff heal you and see you are human.” (Siegel: JAMA 1994) • Respect individuality in dealing with grief, every person grieves differently • Clinic team being cognizant of how each staff member copes • Pursuing healthy coping strategies • Humor • Working as a team to support each other 6 Dogs on Call Harper’s Hope • • • • • • • • Founded 1 year ago by Vic and Anne Harper Funding has been able to provide: A social worker to all neuromuscular patients- Hattie Figgers Registered dietitian services increased from a half day to a full day Research to lead to new treatment strategies PhD student to conduct research in collaboration with ALS Worldwide Educational training to physicians throughout the state regarding the diagnosis and treatment of ALS https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GlnBcO4fQ30 7 ALS Support Group • Monthly ALS Support Group held at Glen Allen Library • Support group is run by clinic staff • Identified need for ALS Caregiver Support Group • Support group is kept positive; plan fun activities and outings 8