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Psychological Issues in Palliative Care: Elissa Kozlov and Des Azizoddin

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Manage episode 402340205 series 3008298
Content provided by GeriPal, Alex Smith, and Eric Widera. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by GeriPal, Alex Smith, and Eric Widera or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

In our podcast with palliative care pioneer Susan Block, she identified the psychological/psychiatric aspects of palliative care as the biggest are of need for improvement. As she said, when you think about the hardest patients you’ve cared for, in nearly all cases there was some aspect of psychological illness involved. That rings true to me.

Today we talk with two psychologists who are deeply invested in addressing psychological aspects of care for people living with serious illness. Elissa Kozlov, a geropsychologist and director of a new population aging MPH at Rutgers, surveyed AAHPM members, and found that doctors reported major shortcomings in level of comfort and knowledge caring for patients with psychological illness. She conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of 38 palliative care trials, finding that many excluded people with serious illness, and a lack of impact on psychological outcomes. Analyzing the Health and Retirement Study, she found 60% of older adults screened positive for depression in the last year of life (related study here).

Des Azizoddin is a psychologist at the University of Oklahoma primarily focused on pain for people with cancer. Des delivered a plenary at this year’s National Palliative Care Research Center’s Foley retreat. She began by asking, “Raise your hand if you think there is a psychological component to cancer pain.” All hands go up. Then, “Keep your hand up if you frequently refer patients with cancer pain to a psychologist?” All hands go down. Unfortunately, we lack the financial structures to reimburse psychologists that would incentivize widespread inclusion on palliative care teams. Because we live in the world as it is, not as it should be, Des has helped develop an app (link to pilot trial hot off the press!) to help people with cancer pain engage in cognitive behavioral therapy in bite sized 3-4 minute sessions (there are other apps available now developed in the VA, who have been leaders in the psychology/palliative care space). Des additionally studied stigma associated with opioid use among patients with cancer in the context of the opioid epidemic; depression, pain catastrophizing, recent surgery and opioid use among people with cancer.

And, we talk about these issues and more (with far more nuance than I can include in this post).

Kudos and credit to my son Renn, age 15, for the guitar on Heartbeats (hand still broken at time of recording).

  continue reading

310 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 402340205 series 3008298
Content provided by GeriPal, Alex Smith, and Eric Widera. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by GeriPal, Alex Smith, and Eric Widera or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

In our podcast with palliative care pioneer Susan Block, she identified the psychological/psychiatric aspects of palliative care as the biggest are of need for improvement. As she said, when you think about the hardest patients you’ve cared for, in nearly all cases there was some aspect of psychological illness involved. That rings true to me.

Today we talk with two psychologists who are deeply invested in addressing psychological aspects of care for people living with serious illness. Elissa Kozlov, a geropsychologist and director of a new population aging MPH at Rutgers, surveyed AAHPM members, and found that doctors reported major shortcomings in level of comfort and knowledge caring for patients with psychological illness. She conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of 38 palliative care trials, finding that many excluded people with serious illness, and a lack of impact on psychological outcomes. Analyzing the Health and Retirement Study, she found 60% of older adults screened positive for depression in the last year of life (related study here).

Des Azizoddin is a psychologist at the University of Oklahoma primarily focused on pain for people with cancer. Des delivered a plenary at this year’s National Palliative Care Research Center’s Foley retreat. She began by asking, “Raise your hand if you think there is a psychological component to cancer pain.” All hands go up. Then, “Keep your hand up if you frequently refer patients with cancer pain to a psychologist?” All hands go down. Unfortunately, we lack the financial structures to reimburse psychologists that would incentivize widespread inclusion on palliative care teams. Because we live in the world as it is, not as it should be, Des has helped develop an app (link to pilot trial hot off the press!) to help people with cancer pain engage in cognitive behavioral therapy in bite sized 3-4 minute sessions (there are other apps available now developed in the VA, who have been leaders in the psychology/palliative care space). Des additionally studied stigma associated with opioid use among patients with cancer in the context of the opioid epidemic; depression, pain catastrophizing, recent surgery and opioid use among people with cancer.

And, we talk about these issues and more (with far more nuance than I can include in this post).

Kudos and credit to my son Renn, age 15, for the guitar on Heartbeats (hand still broken at time of recording).

  continue reading

310 episodes

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