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Alex 01:42 And we’re delighted to welcome from my home state of Michigan, Joe Dixon, who’s a geriatrician and palliativecare doc at Trinity Health. They have an advanced directive that specifies the type of they would care they would like to receive in a very specific situation, but not the situation at hand.
Summary Transcript Summary In May we did a podcast on KidneyPal (the integration of palliativecare in renal disease) , which made us think, hmmm… one organ right next door is the liver. We have Kirsten Engel, who is a n emergency medicine and palliativecare doc at MGH. Maybe we should do a podcast on LiverPal? (or
Summary Transcript CME Summary Early in my research career, I was fascinated by the (then) frontier area of palliativecare in the emergency department. Today we focus on an intervention , published in JAMA, that gave emergency clinicians basic palliativecare knowledge, training, and skills. Why do so many (most, all??)
Alex: And we have returning, Bob Arnold, who is a palliativecare doctor at the University of Pittsburgh. Alex: Also returning Rebecca Sudore, who is professor of medicine at the UCSF in the division of geriatrics, and is a geriatric and palliativecare doctor. Susan: Thanks so much, Alex. Welcome back, Bob.
Alex: And we’re delighted to welcome back Karl Steinberg, he’s a palliativecare doc and a geriatrician. He’s President of National POLST and recent past president of AMDA, the Long-Term Care Association. It would have a CPR section and then it would have a healthcareproxy section. Welcome, Abby.
Even if you haven’t completed a healthcareproxy, durable training for healthcare, most states say here’s a list of people who can make that decision in order. I think probably you’ve been hospitalists at some point in your life, you do palliativecare consultations.
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