Pennsylvania Obtains Grant to Study End of Life Care Delivery

[This article posted on January 28, 2010. It is posted within the following categories: Knowledge & Medicine, Science & Research, via Michael Douglas, MD, MBA.]

Pennsylvania’s Corrections Department is getting creative in the healthcare delivery to its aging prison population. With funding courtesy a grant from the National Institute of Nursing Research, the state will be bringing together the appropriate caregiving provider contingent to study the cheapest and most effective ways to deliver end of life (EOL) care. This pro-active move will likely be a point of reference as state budgets come under increasing pressure to provide this level of service to this patient population in the unique ”perfect storm” of declining state budgets devoted to healthcare delivery; exponential growth of geriatric populations/units in correctional facilities; and competition for federal healthcare dollars as the result of the Obama reform package (whenever that occurs).

The project will develop an intervention toolkit for use by staff at any prison in the country. [..] Prison workers, including health care professionals, chaplains, prison society volunteers and corrections officers, will provide information on current limitations, strengths, existing perceptions of end-of-life care among prison stakeholders and areas of care that bear improvement. Using the data collected, researchers will create a set of educational strategies for use by prison staff that they can tailor to fit individual prison’s needs.

The devotion of grant money to fund this type of research is appealing and compelling on many fronts — not the least of which is a shared national discourse which is sure to follow on such unique EOL care initiatives. | LINK

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