Full Course Description


Pharmacology of Pain Management at the End-of-Life: Association Between Pain, Anxiety, Delirium and Sleep Disorders in Terminally ill Patients

Assessment and management of pain at the end of life is a manifold issue with a deep impact on the patient's quality of life. With a better understanding of pain management's key principles at the end of life, caregivers can contribute to providing comfort and solace to their dying patients. 

Studies of dying patients reveal that up to 57 percent describe moderate or severe pain in the last month of life and 23 percent experience uncontrolled pain in the last week of life.  Untreated pain can be devastating to the patient and family or other loved ones not only because of the suffering it produces, but also because it interferes with the ability to complete important tasks at the end of life.  Pain management at the end of life is a right of the patient and the duty of the clinician.  

A key element to achieving satisfactory pain relief for the patient at the end of life is knowledge of pain reduction medications.  Failure to treat pain effectively can result from a lack of clinician training regarding end-of-life care or from the fear of violating ethical, moral, and legal tenets in the administration of pain medication to the dying patient. Clinicians may have an exaggerated misperception of the risk of hastening death when treating patients with opioids. Furthermore, some clinicians may be unclear about the clear associations between sedation for intractable pain, anxiety, delirium and sleep disturbances at the end of life as they relate to pain management.  

This presentation will highlight the latest pharmacologic modalities to treat pain at the end of life.  In addition to discussing the pharmacology of opioids, we will also state the importance of NSAIDS, benzodiazepines, antidepressants, hypnotics and anticonvulsants in pain management.  The importance of drug-drug interactions and organ failure with regards to end-of-life pharmacology will be highlighted. 14

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Describe the stepwise progression in pain management at the end of life. 
  2. State at least two indications for initiating opioids at the end of life. 
  3. Discriminate the medications for breakthrough pain when opioids are not effective for pain control. 
  4. Identify at least two medications which are used for intractable pain. 
  5. List at least two medications which can be used to aid sleep for the patient at the end of life. 

Outline

Pharmacokinetics of analgesics 

Non-opioid medications 

  • NSAIDS 
  • Acetaminophen 
  • Anti-depressants 
  • Anti-convulsant 

Opioid medications 

  • Naturally occurring 
  • Semisynthetic compounds 
  • Synthetically manufactured 

Breakthrough pain management 

Benzodiazepines 

  • Intractable pain 
  • Anxiety relief 

Delirium recognition and pharmacologic treatment 

Pharmacologic agents used in sleep management 

Complications with pharmacologic pain management at the end of life 

  • Drug-drug interactions 
  • Drug-food interactions 
  • Organ Failure 

Case studies 

Target Audience

  • Nurse Practitioners
  • Advanced Practice Nurses
  • Physician Assistants
  • Physicians
  • Pharmacists
  • Nurses

Copyright : 09/06/2023

Pharmacology Update: End of Life Symptom Management

Alleviation of non-pain symptoms at end of life can often be challenging for patients, families, and practitioners.  Managing these symptoms includes a thorough history and physical, understanding complex pathophysiology related to the symptoms, and prescribing appropriate medications that lead to an optimal quality of life.  This session will review common symptoms, pharmacologic management, and relevant family education, while utilizing an interdisciplinary approach.  

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Discuss the components of treating dyspnea at end of life, to include history and physical, pathophysiology, pharmacologic management, family education, and inclusion of the interdisciplinary team. 
  2. Review pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic management of GI symptoms at end of life to include nausea, vomiting, constipation, diarrhea, and anorexia. 
  3. Identify specific strategies to treat anxiety and existential distress at end of life utilizing medications and the interdisciplinary team. 
  4. Evaluate the causes and treatment of fatigue when it presents with terminal illness. 
  5. Assess depression at end of life and pharmacologic management. 

Outline

Alleviating Suffering at End of Life: Managing Non-Pain Symptoms 

  • Dyspnea 
  • GI symptoms - nausea, vomiting, constipation, diarrhea, anorexia 
  • Anxiety/existential distress 
  • Fatigue 
  • Depression 

Discover the latest best practices for each symptom: 

  • History and physical 
  • Pathophysiology 
  • Pharmacologic management 
  • Family education 
  • Interdisciplinary approach 
  • Case study  
  • Sample assessment tools 

Copyright : 10/19/2023

End Stage Diseases: Care When There is No Cure

Each particular end-stage disease has unique complexities for the patient, the family, and the healthcare professional. This presentation will cover specific strategies to care for various end stage patients.  This will include end-stage liver, kidney, lung disease, heart disease, cancer, and pharmacological interventions to provide palliative care measures. 

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Evaluate functional assessment scales that are predictive of poor survival. 
  2. Explain the benefits of using palliative care principles for five end-stage diseases. 
  3. Discuss pharmacological measures for acceptable interventions. 

Outline

Prognostication 

  • Palliative Performance Scale (PPS) 
  • Mortality Risk Indicator (MRI) 
  • Charlson 
  • Mitchell Mortality Index 
  • E-Prognosis 
Palliative Care for Serious Illness 
  • Definitions of PC 
National Consensus Project (4th Ed) 

Management of End-Stage Heart Failure 
  • Assessment and Prognosis 
  • Symptoms and Symptom Management 
  • Pharmacologic 
  • Non-pharmacologic 
Management of End-Stage COPD 
  • Assessment and Prognosis (GOLD) tools 
  • Symptoms and Symptom Management 
  • Pharmacologic 
  • Non-pharmacologic 
Management of End Stage Renal Disease 
  • Assessment and Prognosis (GFR) 
  • Symptoms and Symptom Management 
  • Pharmacologic 
  • Non-pharmacologic 
Management of End Stage Liver Disease 
  • Assessment and Prognosis (MELD) 
  • Symptoms and Symptom Management 
  • Pharmacologic 
  • Non-pharmacologic 
Management of End Stage Dementia 
  • Assessment and Prognosis (FAST, GDS, MRI, MMRI) 
  • Symptoms and Symptom Management-Delirium/Agitation 
  • Pharmacologic 
  • Non-pharmacologic 

Copyright : 10/20/2023

Nourishing the Older Adult: Challenges and Controversies

In this session, Liz will provide a general overview of the nutritional needs of older adults and components of nutrition assessment that are unique to this population. She will outline key nutrients needed by older adults, the roles they play, and food sources of those nutrients. She will discuss the use of dietary supplements and other ways to meet an older adult’s unique nutritional needs.  She will also address topics that are perceived to be controversial including the obesity paradox, the use of therapeutic diets for disease management of older adults, and the relationship of diet to cognitive decline.

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Identify at least 4 factors related to aging that can affect nutritional status in older adults.
  2. Demonstrate an understanding of macronutrients needed for the health of older adults.
  3. Demonstrate an understanding of micronutrients needed for the health of older adults.
  4. Select appropriate nutrition interventions to help promote health and longevity in older adults.

Outline

Introduction

  • Demographics and health status of older adults
    • Life expectancy
    • Health status/Health concerns of older adults
    • Where do older adults reside (community dwelling vs. post-acute care)
    • Rates of obesity and frailty
Nutrition assessment of older adults
  • Factors unique to older adults
  • Identifying over nutrition and under nutrition
    • Body mass index
    • Serum albumin
    • Academy/ASPEN criteria for identification of malnutrition
  • Potential barriers to providing effective nutrition interventions
Nutrients needed for good health
  • Food sources
  • Roles of nutrients in the body
  • Use of dietary supplements to meet nutritional needs
  • Meeting nutritional needs when food intake is inadequate
Controversies
  • The obesity paradox
  • Using therapeutic diets to treat disease
  • Can diet prevent cognitive decline?

Target Audience

  • Nurses
  • Nurse Practitioners
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Occupational Therapy Assistants
  • Physical Therapists
  • Physical Therapist Assistants
  • Physician Assistants
  • Speech Language Pathologists
  • Other Healthcare Professionals

Copyright : 09/29/2022

End of Life: Palliative and Hospice Care Benefits

Caring for patients facing the end of their lives requires extreme sensitivity, deep compassion, and extraordinary knowledge. To deliver informed and compassionate care, healthcare professionals need to understand the differences between hospice and palliative care.

You will leave this session with concrete strategies to identify patients for whom aggressive therapy is not appropriate, skills to work through palliative referral and financial considerations, and the latest when it comes to hospice eligibility criteria.

Each end-of-life patient trusted to your care deserves to be optimally supported, on the final journey of their life.

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Determine referral considerations for palliative care.
  2. Analyze the myths surrounding hospice care.
  3. Differentiate between hospice and palliative care services.
  4. Evaluate the eight domains of the National Consensus Project.

Outline

Pillars of Palliative Care 

  • National Consensus Report 
  • Referral considerations 
  • Financial considerations 
  • Barriers and Benefits to PC 
Hospice 
  • Services 
  • IDG/IDT 
  • Medicare benefit (levels of care) 
  • Eligibility criteria 
  • Financial considerations 
  • Barriers and Benefits to Hospice 

Target Audience

  • Nurses
  • Nurse Practitioners
  • Clinical Nurse Specialists
  • Physician Assistants
  • Social Workers
  • Case Managers
  • Physical Therapists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Speech Language Pathologists

Copyright : 08/29/2022

End-of-life Compassionate Care: Ethical and Legal Issues

The goal of end-of-life care is to prevent or minimize suffering while respecting the dying person’s wishes. End-of-life decisions are made in all age groups and the number of individuals aged sixty-five (65) years and older is projected to double by 2060. Health care providers are facing enormous challenges in assisting patients and their families to transition to the final stage of existence. Self-care and education are paramount in developing appropriate coping mechanisms necessary to provide compassionate end-of-life care. This course will provide strategies for implementing safe and effective end-of-life care. Case studies illustrating ethical dilemmas and plausible resolutions are incorporated. 

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Describe the appropriate uses and requirements for Physician Orders for Life- Sustaining Treatment (POLST). 
  2. Discuss ethical and legal issues related to the decision to withdraw treatment or lifesaving measures. 
  3. Identify how to navigate the health care professional’s responsibilities and obligations while respecting the dying patient’s values and wishes. 
  4. Expand the health care professional’s knowledge of how to cope with the ethical dilemmas thar occur with end-of-life. 

Outline

END-OF-LIFE CARE 

  • Affects all age groups 
  • 65-year-old population is projected to double by 2060. 
  • Patients, families, health care providers, and community members all in need of support and education 
SUGGESTED CHECKLIST 
  • DNR forms 
  • Physician Orders for Life (Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST} 
  • Durable medical power of attorney 
  • Living will 
  • Last will and testament  
  • Revocable living trust 
  • Beneficiary designation for non-probate assets 
  • Durable financial power of attorney 
  • Pet trust 
  • End-of life housing arrangements 
  • Instructions for digital assets 
  • Life insurance 
  • Funeral or celebration of life instructions. Burial, cremation, organ, and body donation 
DEATH WITH DIGNITY/WITHDRAWAL OR WITHHOLDING OF TREATMENT OR LIFE SAVING MEASURES 
  • Hospice 
  • Palliative care 
  • Euthanasia 
  • Assisted suicide/Aid in dying 
  • Abuse/neglect 
PATIENT VALUES/CULTURAL (psychological, sociological, and physiological) 
  • Family conflict/decisions not cohesive 
  • Communication 
  • Preparation  
  • Education 
HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS’ COPING MECHANISMS  
  • Peer groups (intervention, support, therapy, and review) 
  • Ethics panels, boards, or committees 
  • Licensure/Credentialing Boards 
  • Institutional regulations, policies, procedures, and protocols  
  • Professional negligence or malpractice 

Target Audience

  • Nurse Practitioners
  • Advanced Practice Nurses
  • Physician Assistants
  • Physicians
  • Pharmacists
  • Nurses

Copyright : 08/03/2023

Culture into Practice: Improving the End of Life Experience

Death is a natural part of the life. The process of dying is as important as the birthing process and all other stages of life. With unique backgrounds, values, and beliefs, individuals bring different needs and expectations to the dying process. It is imperative that healthcare professionals understand, value, and deliver end of life care that is unique to each patient and their family.  

Culture plays a significant role in how individuals view themselves and their role in the family and the world around them. Therefore, patients’ approach to illness and death is directly impacted by cultural factors. End of life care should be personalized with the patient’s cultural factors in mind. This webinar will provide important factors and practices to consider when delivering culturally responsive end of life care. 

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Evaluate culture and culture humility for individual patient considerations. 
  2. Analyze major categories of cultural influence on end-of-life beliefs and decisions.   
  3. Explore how culture impacts the end-of-life experience. 
  4. Discuss practice considerations to improve patients' end-of-life experiences while honoring cultural preferences. 
  5. Determine the impact of social determinants of health on the quality of comfort care and end-of-life. 

Outline

Improving the End-of-Life experience 

  • Cultural care considerations 
    • Culture 
    • Culture humility 
    • Provider’s self-assessment 
  • Categories of cultural influence (understanding values, belief, preferences of EOL care) 
    • Race/ethnicity 
    • Religion  
    • Geographical region 
    • Socio-economic status  
  • Social drivers of health 
    • Education access and quality 
    • Access to quality healthcare 
    • Economic stability 
    • Social and community context 
    • Neighborhoods and built environments 

Exploring the patient’s end of life preferences  

  • Preparing for your death experience. 
  • Meaning and purpose (Viktor Frankel) 
  • Dying gracefully 
  • Family dynamics 
  • Leaving a legacy 

Copyright : 10/19/2023

Death, Dying & Bereavement: New Strategies for Clients & Their Families to Find Meaning at the End of Life

Death is inevitable. Looking into the face of death is one of the scariest and most emotional battles that your clients will ever have to go through. Are you ready and able to guide your clients through their death, or the death of a loved one?

Join Ligia M. Houben, MA, FT, FAAGC, CPC, CHT, and she’ll walk you through how to best help your client and your client’s family cope with dying and bereavement. You’ll learn new techniques for processing and normalizing grief, as well as strategies to help your clients create meaningful rituals and get the most out of their hospice care.

You’ll finish this recording having gained new insights into the needs of the dying, including the emotional need to have difficult conversations with family members who may not yet be ready to accept that their loved one is dying. You’ll obtain new tools to address death anxiety and learn how culture and spirituality shape your client’s end-of-life experiences. 

Purchase today to transform the way you treat clients struggling with death, dying and bereavement.

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Analyze and explain how different perspectives on the afterlife affect individual responses to death and bereavement.
  2. Develop strategies to assist clients and their caregivers with end-of-life preparation.
  3. Utilize tools and strategies to normalize grief and to aid clients and their caregivers in processing grief.

Outline

CONTEMPORARY ATTITUDES TOWARD DEATH & DYING

  • Death anxiety (Thanatophobia) or death acceptance?
  • The new death awareness movement
  • Clinicians’ attitudes toward death & dying

THE DYING PATIENT & THEIR FAMILY SYSTEM

  • Terminal illness is a family matter
  • The dying trajectory
  • Forgiveness, love & emotional healing at the end of life
  • How belief in the afterlife effects death
  • Anticipatory grief & preparatory grief

PREPARING FOR THE END OF LIFE

  • Validate & help to process emotions
  • Assist in addressing spiritual needs
  • Pain management & comfort
  • Legal documents & advanced care planning

CONTEMPORARY ASSESSMENTS & INTERVENTIONS

  • Assess death anxiety
  • Tools for processing & normalizing grief
  • Meaningful rituals for patients & families
  • Considerations for cancer patients

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Psychiatrists
  • Nurses
  • Nursing Home Administrators
  • Case Managers
  • Marriage & Family Therapists
  • Chaplains/Clergy
  • Palliative Care Services
  • Thanatologists
  • Funeral Directors
  • Addiction Counselors
  • Other Mental Health Professionals

Copyright : 01/14/2020

Serious Illness Messaging and Crucial Conversations

One of the biggest challenges healthcare professionals face is the serious illness messaging and critical conversations that are vital for patient care.  Advance care planning is often overlooked. Many patients we see simply do not have one.  However, the important aspect of guiding patients through their medical treatment and care involves very specific discussions for them.  In this session, you will learn about advance care planning and your role in it.  You will also learn about serious illness messaging, conversation steps and guidelines, the power of four words, and how to address consent and decision-making challenges.  We will end with a discussion on addressing the most difficult questions “how long do I have?” 

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Determine three measures to bring awareness of Advance Care Planning (ACP) to your facility. 
  2. Analyze two action steps to implementing ACP conversations. 
  3. Evaluate serious illness messaging and how to incorporate it into your practice/agency.  
  4. Recognize tools, tests and instruments used in assessing and discussing prognosis. 
  5. Plan your own conversations regarding choices, values, and wishes. 

Outline

What is Advance Care Planning (ACP) 

  • Why is ACP important and needed? 
  • Benefits and barriers 
  • Continuum of ACP 
  • Impact of unwanted, nonbeneficial treatment 
  • Why ACP discussions are not started 

What is Serious illness 

  • Serious illness/Dying trajectories 

Serious Illness Messaging 

  • Serious illness conversation guide 
  • COVID-19 response tool 
  • Vital talks 
  • 2023 serious illness conversation guide 

Communication and Critical Conversations 

  • Communication needs of the patient 
  • Communication needs of the family 
  • Patient and family expectations 
  • Communication and shared decision making 
  • Who initiates the discussion 
  • Tools to assist ACP conversations 
  • Explain the default policy 
  • Non-beneficial treatment 
  • Questions for the doctor 
  • Questions at the time of diagnosis 
  • How much can we share 

The Power of Four Words 

  • “What Matters to You” 
  • What to discuss 
  • Culturally appropriate discussions 
  • Goals of care/ Treatment options discussion 
  • Centering treatment on what matters 
  • Lack of continuity 

Treatments to Prolong life 

  • Video, “Ain’t No Way to Die” 
  • CPR discussion 
  • Responding to emotion 
  • COVID 19 and critical conversations 
  • Maintaining hope and truth  

Addressing Consent and Decision-Making Challenges 

  • Medical/professional obligations 

Advance Care Planning Documents 

  • What is an advance directive (vs a will)? 
  • When to review an advance directive 
  • Misconceptions about advance directives 
  • When to do an advance directive 
  • What is a healthcare agent 
  • Things to consider when choosing a healthcare agent 
  • Examples of a healthcare agent 
  • What is POLST 
  • Where does POLST fit in? 
  • Comparing advance directive to POLST 
  • Our role with POLST 
  • What happens in an emergency situation? 

“How long do I have?” 

  • What is medical prognosis 
  • Determining prognosis 
  • What about the probable outcome 
  • Scales and tools to assist with prognostication 
  • Our role is prognosis communication 
  • Using the Serious Illness Conversation Guide 
  • Cultural considerations about disclosure of diagnosis and prognosis 

Copyright : 10/20/2023

Compassion Fatigue Certification Training for Healthcare, Mental Health and Caring Professionals

Compassion is at the heart of your work, and at the heart of you. But excessive demands on your empathy can leave you feeling worn down, burdened by the suffering of others, and dreading your next day on the job.

This is Compassion Fatigue. It’s more than being overworked, and it’s a threat to the safety of your patients, your own wellbeing, your relationships, and your career.

This program is exactly what you need to regain purpose, fulfillment, and thrive in your profession – whether you’re already experiencing the emotional burnout of Compassion Fatigue, or want to make sure you avoid it.

Best of all, upon completion of this training, you’ll be eligible to become a Certified Compassion Fatigue Professional (CCFP) through Evergreen Certifications. Certification lets colleagues, employers, and clients know that you’ve invested the extra time and effort necessary to understand the complexities of compassion fatigue. Professional standards apply. Visit www.evergreencertifications.com/CCFP for details.

If you work in healthcare, mental health, veterinary medicine, rehab or any helping profession this is one training you can’t afford to miss.

Purchase today!​


CERTIFICATION MADE SIMPLE!

  • No hidden fees – PESI pays for your application fee (a $99.99 value)!
  • Simply complete this seminar and the post-event evaluation included in this training, and your application to be a Certified Compassion Fatigue Professional through Evergreen Certifications is complete.*

Attendees will receive documentation of CCFP designation from Evergreen Certifications 4 to 6 weeks following the program.

*Professional standards apply. Visit www.evergreencertifications.com/CCFP for professional requirements.

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Analyze the concept of compassion fatigue and establish how it relates to secondary trauma and burnout.
  2. Assess the factors that can contribute to compassion fatigue.
  3. Investigate the role of autonomic nervous system reactions in compassion fatigue.
  4. Apply assessment instruments that can be employed to identify the signs of compassion fatigue in self and others.
  5. Employ evidence-based strategies from mindfulness and mental health treatments to reduce stress and increase well-being.
  6. Demonstrate how organizations can build resiliency in their employees and increase retention.

Outline

Compassion Fatigue’s Impact on Professionals, the Workplace, and Caregivers

  • History of compassion fatigue
  • Compassion fatigue, secondary trauma, depression, and burnout
  • Recognize contributing factors
  • Identify how compassion fatigue robs you of your ability to nurture
  • The ethics of self-care – research evidence
Red Flags to Watch for: Signs and Symptoms of Compassion Fatigue
  • The nervous system’s role in CF and its symptomology
  • Assessment instruments for self and others
  • Identify triggers for emotional distress
  • Review your personal/professional history
The Compassion and Empathy Toolkit: How to Maintain Purpose, Fulfillment and Thrive
  • Reset during the workday with strategies to:
    • Restore compassion & clarity
    • Reconnect with the rewards
    • Raise your gratitude quotient
    • Apply your signature strengths in new ways
  • Build competence and compassion by being present
Conquer Burnout with Strategies To: De-Stress, Manage Emotions, Reduce Anxiety, and Stop Feeling Overwhelmed
  • Deep breathing exercises for immediate calm
  • Right here/right now – stay in the moment to reduce anxieties
  • Effective and healthy ways to manage your emotions
  • Change limiting stories about caring for yourself
  • Release the negative – 3 steps to countering negativity bias
Create a Healthy Home/Work Balance
  • Bring calm after work hours with relaxation techniques
  • Restore body & mind with awareness
  • Stop replaying your day – strategies to end rumination
  • How to rewire your brain towards happiness
  • Food as medicine – nutrition tips for enhancing resiliency and wellbeing
Retention and Resiliency Strategies: How Organizations and Individuals Can Build Better Work Environments
  • How cleansing the toxic workplace combats compassion fatigue
  • Manage bullying and blaming
  • Communication strategies for collaborative relationships
  • Stair-steps towards building resilient practitioners
  • Empowering leadership for change

Target Audience

  • Nurses
  • Nurse Educators
  • Nurse Practitioners
  • Clinical Nurse Specialists
  • Floor Directors and Managers
  • Nursing Home Administrators
  • CNAs
  • Physicians
  • Physician Assistants
  • Physical Therapists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Veterinarians
  • Veterinary Technicians
  • Veterinary Practice Managers
  • Social Workers
  • Counselors
  • Marriage and Family Therapists
  • Clinical Supervisors
  • Educators
  • Addiction Counselors
  • Psychologists
  • Case Managers
  • Others in Caring Professions

Copyright : 07/14/2022