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THE LILIAN AND BENJAMIN HERTZBERG PALLIATIVE CARE INSTITUTE Dr. R. Sean Morrison, Director of the Hertzberg Palliative Care Institute and the National Palliative Care Research Center (NPCRC), was in April granted the American Cancer Society’s most highly regarded research award. The American Cancer Society’s Clinical Research Professor Award, one of only two such grants available annually, will bring $400,000 to NPCRC over the next five years to develop programs in specialized palliative care for pediatric cancer patients and to help nurture a new generation of young researchers in the field of palliative care. “The fact that the American Cancer Society gave a palliative medicine physician their most prestigious research award clearly demonstrates the strides and impact that our field has made in this country,” said Dr. Morrison. Palliative care is a relatively new and growing medical specialty focused on relieving the symptoms, pain and stress of serious illness for patients and their families. It provides an added layer of support for patients of all ages and at all stages of any serious or advanced illness, regardless of the prognosis. However, many existing techniques for managing pain and other symptoms have been developed for adults and do not adapt well to the treatment of children, explains Dr. Morrison. “We have a tremendous lack of evidence for how to effectively treat children with symptoms as common as pain or fatigue. These are symptoms that can rob pediatric patients of their childhood and for some patients can continue well into their adult lives,” he said. “Our hope is to really help improve the evidence base for kids with serious illness.” Dr. Morrison expects the grant to help foster a new generation of early-stage investigators in the field of palliative care and to provide palliative care researchers all over the country with a central place to access the technical assistance they need to advance their work. Dr. Morrison’s hope is that such research will help to plug the gaps in the evidence base for palliative care. This includes finding or improving techniques for the management of symptoms such as breathlessness, fatigue, anxiety, Funding will develop programs in specialized palliative care for children and foster a new generation of palliative care researchers R. Sean Morrison, MD PALLIATIVE CARE NEWSLETTER FALL 2014 BROOKDALE DEPARTMENT of GERIATRICS AND PALLIATIVE MEDICINE continued on page 4 Hertzberg Director Wins Prestigious AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY GRANT

HPCI Fall 2014

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Page 1: HPCI Fall 2014

THE LILIAN AND BENJAMIN HERTZBERG PALLIATIVE CARE INSTITUTE

Dr. R. Sean Morrison, Director of the Hertzberg Palliative Care Institute and the National Palliative Care Research Center (NPCRC), was in April granted the American Cancer Society’s most highly regarded research award.

The American Cancer Society’s Clinical Research Professor Award, one of only two such grants available annually, will bring $400,000 to NPCRC over the next five years to develop programs in specialized palliative care for pediatric cancer patients and to help nurture a new generation of young researchers in the field of palliative care.

“The fact that the American Cancer Society gave a palliative medicine physician their most prestigious research award clearly demonstrates the strides and impact that our field has made in this country,” said Dr. Morrison.

Palliative care is a relatively new and growing medical specialty focused on relieving the symptoms, pain and stress of serious illness for patients and their families. It provides an added layer of support for patients of all ages and at all stages of any serious or advanced illness, regardless of the prognosis.

However, many existing techniques for managing pain and other symptoms have been developed for adults and do not adapt well to the treatment of children, explains Dr. Morrison. “We have a tremendous lack of evidence for how to effectively treat children with symptoms as common as pain or fatigue. These are symptoms that can rob pediatric patients of their childhood and for some patients can continue well into their adult lives,” he said. “Our hope is to really help improve the evidence base for kids with serious illness.”

Dr. Morrison expects the grant to help foster a new generation of early-stage investigators in the field of palliative care and to provide palliative care researchers all over the country with a central place to access the technical assistance they need to advance their work.

Dr. Morrison’s hope is that such research will help to plug the gaps in the evidence base for palliative care. This includes finding or improving techniques for the management of symptoms such as breathlessness, fatigue, anxiety,

Funding will develop programs in specialized palliative care for children and foster a new generation of palliative care researchers

R. Sean Morrison, MD

PALLIATIVE CARE NEWSLETTER

“To

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FALL 2014

BROOKDALE DEPARTMENT of GERIATRICS AND PALLIATIVE MEDICINE

continued on page 4

Hertzberg Director Wins Prestigious AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY GRANT

Page 2: HPCI Fall 2014

THE LILIAN AND BENJAMIN HERTZBERG PALLIATIVE CARE INSTITUTE | SPRING NEWSLETTER | 2

Dr. Elizabeth Lindenberger, Assistant Professor of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine at Mount Sinai, in August became one of the first ten recipients of a new grant program to advance groundbreaking palliative care initiatives. Dr. Lindenberger plans to use the funds to develop a program of communication training for generalist clinicians caring for older and seriously ill adults.

The inaugural Sojourns Scholar Leadership Program, funded by the Cambia Health Foundation, provides emerging leaders in palliative care with a two-year, $180,000 award to support research, clinical, educational or policy projects.

“Skilled communication is a core component of primary palliative care, and yet the majority of providers receive no formal communication training,” said Dr. Lindenberger.

Palliative care is a new but rapidly growing field focused on relieving the pain, symptoms and stress of serious illness. Communication is at the heart of this kind of care, to help patients and families get the information and support they need over the course of an illness, and to help them make treatment decisions in line with their individual goals.

“I believe that clinicians want to feel confident leading difficult conversations with patients and their families who are navigating the challenges of illness and treatment decisions. Promoting

communication training for generalist clinicians will be critical to meeting the needs of older patients, their families, and the healthcare system,” said Dr. Lindenberger. “This conviction has inspired my goal to become a national leader in communication training for clinicians of all disciplines caring for older people.”

Dr. Lindenberger’s hands-on training course will be geared to nurses and physicians caring for older patients throughout Mount Sinai Health System. The new program will be based on GeriTalk, a two-day, evidence-based immersion course focused on teaching, practicing, and reflecting on effective communication skills supported by the Goldberg Education Fund and Mrs. Robyn Lane in memory of her husband, Mark Lane. Dr. Lindenberger is hopeful that after the grant program is complete, such communication training will be widely available for clinicians nationwide.

Dr. Lindenberger directs and oversees the educational programs for medical trainees and existing faculty at the Hertzberg Palliative Care Institute at Mount Sinai. This includes leadership of the Institute’s fellowship program, which she has helped grow to become the largest and most competitive palliative care training program in the country. With ten palliative care and integrated geriatrics and palliative care fellows, this year’s incoming class is the largest in the field’s history. ■

Educational Director to Expand Innovative Communications Training

Linda Pang, MD; Sachin Kale, MD; Amanda Overstreet, DO; Elizabeth Lindenberger, MD; Christopher Woodrell, MD; Sivan Ben-Moshe, MD; Monica Sandoval, MD; Rachel Bedard, MD

Dr. Elizabeth Lindenberger wins funding from Cambia Health Foundation’s new palliative care leadership program

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THE LILIAN AND BENJAMIN HERTZBERG PALLIATIVE CARE INSTITUTE | SPRING NEWSLETTER |3

Dr. R. Sean Morrison, Director of the Hertzberg Institute for Palliative Care and the National Palliative Care Research Center, spent a day on Capitol Hill in July to rally support for two new bills that will provide better access, education and research for palliative care.

Dr. Morrison led one of ten teams in a day of lobbying steered by the Patient Quality of Life Coalition (PQLC). Members of the coalition visited more than 60 congressional offices to educate lawmakers on the value and impact of palliative care and to ask for support. Dr. Morrison’s team alone met with eight Senate and House offices from both sides of the aisle.

The day’s efforts generated numerous new sponsors for the “Palliative Care and Hospice Education and Training Act” (HR. 1339/S. 641) and the “Patient Centered Quality Care for Life Act” (HR. 1666/ S. 2800). One of the lawmakers persuaded by Dr. Morrison’s presentation was Senator Angus King (I-ME), who co-sponsored the introduction of the “Patient Centered Quality Care for Life Act” in the Senate this September.

The Patient Quality of Life Coalition

includes more than 20 nongovernmental organizations dedicated to improving quality of life for seriously ill patients and their families. Members of the coalition include Mount Sinai’s Patty and Jay Baker National Palliative Care Center, which encompasses the National Palliative Care Research Center and the Center to Advance Palliative Care.

Since its founding in 2013, the PQLC has developed a consensus-based agenda aimed at promoting public policy that will improve and expand access to high quality palliative care.

Palliative care has been shown to improve both quality of care and quality of life during and after treatment. By focusing on the goals and needs of patients and their families, it enables patients receiving palliative care to avoid crises, make fewer emergency room visits, spend fewer days in the hospital and intensive care unit, and have less need for re-admission. ■

Hertzberg Director Campaigns forPALLIATIVE CARE BILLS

Peggy Belanger, ACS CAN Volunteer; Sean Morrison, MD, Hertzberg Palliative Care Institute; Christina Raia, Cancer Support Community; Emily Warner, Center to Advance Palliative Care; and Rep. Spencer Bachus, Alabama’s Sixth District

Dr. Sean Morrison joins lobbying efforts for new legislation that will expand palliative care access, education and research

Dr. Morrison and his group prepare for the meetings on Capitol Hill.

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THE LILIAN AND BENJAMIN HERTZBERG PALLIATIVE CARE INSTITUTE | SPRING NEWSLETTER | 4

and depression; development of communication techniques to effectively deliver information to patients and assist with their decision-making; research into models of care delivery, in particular outside the hospital setting; and research into spiritual distress and the impact it can have on patients and their families.

Dr. Morrison was also recognized this summer by Thomson Reuters in its list of the “World’s Most Influential Scientific Minds: 2014.” In 2013, the American Cancer Society recognized Dr. Morrison’s work to enhance quality of life for cancer patients with its award for

Distinguished Achievement in Cancer. ■

continued from page 1American Cancer Society Grant

“The Loom”The Hertzberg Palliative Care Institute, together with the Department of Child Life and Creative Arts Therapy, is pleased to introduce the inaugural issue of “The Loom”, our creative arts magazine. “The Loom” is a collection of artwork and creative writing from patients, families, caregivers and staff of the Palliative Care Unit. Art therapy is the therapeutic use of art making by people who experience illness, trauma or challenges in living.

“The Loom” will be published biannually in the Spring and Fall and is available in print or online.To subscribe, please contact [email protected].

Please visit www.mountsinai.org/ palliative for the first issue!

Lilian and Benjamin Hertzberg Palliative Care InstituteBrookdale Department of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount SinaiOne Gustave L. Levy Place, Box 1070, New York, NY 10029

Tel. 212-241-1446 • www.mountsinai.org/palliative

“Our hope is to really help improve the

evidence base for kids with serious illness.”

Dr. R. Sean Morrison

Page 5: HPCI Fall 2014

THE LILIAN AND BENJAMIN HERTZBERG PALLIATIVE CARE INSTITUTE | SPRING NEWSLETTER | 5

Dr. Nathan Goldstein, Director of Research at the Hertzberg Palliative Care Institute, was named Interim Director of the palliative care program at Mount Sinai Beth Israel in June.

The appointment marks Hertzberg’s official expansion to providing palliative care for seriously ill patients and their families in downtown Manhattan. With the support of Beth Israel’s administration, the help and experience of colleagues at Hertzberg, and funding from new philanthropy, Dr. Goldstein hopes to radically expand Beth Israel’s current palliative care program.

“This is an amazing growth opportunity for Beth Israel and for me personally,” said Dr. Goldstein. “I’m so excited to work on building this program further with all the support of the team at Mount Sinai and an administration at Beth Israel that is extremely supportive and dedicated to palliative care.”

First established around 15 years ago as the Department of Pain and Palliative Medicine, the palliative care

program at Beth Israel currently consists of one consultation team and a 12-bed inpatient unit for hospice patients. Dr. Goldstein hopes to enlarge the scope of the program using Mount Sinai’s Hertzberg Palliative Care Institute as his model.

Doctors from Hertzberg have already begun taking part in two-week rotations on the Beth Israel team, providing support to the consultation service and the inpatient unit, and exposing Beth Israel’s palliative care fellows to a broader group of attending physicians. In the next year, Dr. Goldstein hopes to increase the number of consultation teams as well as the number of inpatient beds. He is also looking for philanthropic support for Beth Israel’s palliative care fellowship program to build supportive services and for chaplaincy, social work, and music therapy initiatives.

In the longer term, Dr. Goldstein is aiming to expand Beth Israel’s outpatient program for palliative care to reach members of the community outside of the hospital setting. ■

PALLIATIVE CARE AT MOUNT SINAI BETH ISRAEL TO GROW UNDER

NEW LEADERSHIPDr. Nathan Goldstein hopes to dramatically expand

access to palliative care in Lower Manhattan

Nathan E. Goldstein, MD

“This is an amazing growth opportunity for Beth Israel.”

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