FDA Safety Communication – PPIs

PPIs are used to treat GERD and other GI tract problems.

http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/Safe … 245275.htm

Proton Pump Inhibitor drugs (PPIs): Drug Safety Communication – Low Magnesium Levels Can Be Associated With Long-Term Use

Prescription PPIs include Nexium (esomeprazole magnesium), Dexilant (dexlansoprazole), Prilosec (omeprazole), Zegerid (omeprazole and sodium bicarbonate), Prevacid (lansoprazole), Protonix (pantoprazole sodium), AcipHex (rabeprazole sodium), and Vimovo (a prescription combination drug product that contains a PPI (esomeprazole magnesium and naproxen).

Over-the-counter (OTC) PPIs include Prilosec OTC (omeprazole), Zegerid OTC (omeprazole and sodium bicarbonate), and Prevacid 24HR (lansoprazole).

[Posted 03/02/2011]

AUDIENCE: Consumer, Gastroenterology, Family Practice

ISSUE: FDA notified healthcare professionals and the public that prescription proton pump inhibitor (PPI) drugs may cause low serum magnesium levels (hypomagnesemia) if taken for prolonged periods of time (in most cases, longer than one year). Low serum magnesium levels can result in serious adverse events including muscle spasm (tetany), irregular heartbeat (arrhythmias), and convulsions (seizures); however, patients do not always have these symptoms. Treatment of hypomagnesemia generally requires magnesium supplements. In approximately one-quarter of the cases reviewed, magnesium supplementation alone did not improve low serum magnesium levels and the PPI had to be discontinued.

BACKGROUND: PPIs work by reducing the amount of acid in the stomach and are used to treat conditions such as gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), stomach and small intestine ulcers, and inflammation of the esophagus.

RECOMMENDATION: Healthcare professionals should consider obtaining serum magnesium levels prior to initiation of prescription PPI treatment in patients expected to be on these drugs for long periods of time, as well as patients who take PPIs with medications such as digoxin, diuretics or drugs that may cause hypomagnesemia. For patients taking digoxin, a heart medicine, this is especially important because low magnesium can increase the likelihood of serious side effects. Healthcare professionals should consider obtaining magnesium levels periodically in these patients. For additional information, refer to the Data Summary section of the FDA Drug Safety Communication.

Healthcare professionals and patients are encouraged to report adverse events, side effects, or product quality problems related to the use of these products to the FDA’s MedWatch Safety Information and Adverse Event Reporting Program:

* Complete and submit the report Online: www.fda.gov/MedWatch/report.htm

* Download form or call 1-800-332-1088 to request a reporting form, then complete and return to the address on the pre-addressed form, or submit by fax to 1-800-FDA-0178

[03/02/2011 – Drug Safety Communication – FDA]

Recall of Citalopram, etc.

This Pfizer press release was posted to fda.gov earlier this month. It may be of interest to some of you.

http://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/ucm248552.htm

Recall — Firm Press Release
FDA posts press releases and other notices of recalls and market withdrawals from the firms involved as a service to consumers, the media, and other interested parties. FDA does not endorse either the product or the company.
Page Last Updated: 04/01/2011

Greenstone Announces Voluntary Nationwide Recall
Of Citalopram And Finasteride Due to Possible Mislabeling

Contact:
Pfizer Inc.
1-800-438-1985

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – March 26, 2011 – Greenstone LLC announced today that it is voluntarily conducting a recall, to the patient level, of medicines with lot number FI0510058-A on the label. This includes Citalopram 10mg Tablets (100-count bottle) and Finasteride 5mg Tablets (90-count bottle), both distributed in the U.S. market. The recall is due to the possibility that incorrect labels have been placed on the bottles by a third-party manufacturer. This is the only lot number being recalled and no other lots or markets are believed to be impacted.

Importantly, bottles labeled as Citalopram Lot # FI0510058-A may contain Finasteride. Patients who believe they may have ingested the wrong medication should contact their physician as soon as possible. Women who are, or may become pregnant, should not take or handle Finasteride due to the possible risk of side effects which may cause abnormalities to the external genitalia of a developing male fetus. Citalopram is contraindicated in patients taking monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) or pimozide, It is also contraindicated in patients with a hypersensitivity to Citalopram or any of the inactive ingredients in the tablet. Patients who discontinue Citalopram abruptly by inadvertently taking the mislabeled product may experience discontinuation symptoms and/or worsening of depression.

Bottles of either Citalopram (used to treat depression) or Finasteride (for the treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia) with lot number FI0510058-A should be returned to the pharmacist.

Consumers should contact their physician or healthcare provider if they have experienced any problems that may be related to taking or using this product. Also, any adverse events that may be related to the use of these products should be reported to Pfizer Inc. at-1-800-438-1985 (24 hours a day) or to FDA’s Med Watch Program either online, by regular mail or by fax.

Greenstone LLC is a wholly owned subsidiary of Pfizer Inc.

Things one caregiver learned along the way

Ann Harrison lives in Boston.  Her father died in March from pneumonia.  Her father participated in dementia research studies at Mass General, and his brain was donated there upon his death.  (It’s the only way she will learn which progressive dementia he had.)  This week, Ann posted to an LBD-related online support group a list of things she learned along the way that helped her father.  She gave me permission to share her list, and two subsequent email exchanges about one item on the list (the 24-hour clock) and one item not on the list (brain donation).

– Robin

Posted by:  Ann Harrison
Date:  3/31/11

Here are some things, large and small that I learned [that helped my father.]

Find a neurologist you trust. The disease changes over time and the medications to make the patient most comfortable also change. We saw a “geriatric specialist” first, who put Dad on five or six different medications all at once. Some were good, some were not, but adding them all at once was bad. Then we saw a highly regarded geriatric neurologist who did all the right tests and was slow about adding medications, but who constantly broke appointments and was hard to reach. Then I took [a local support group leader’s] recommendation and saw Dr. Gomperts at MGH. He never decided which of the untreatable progressive dementias Dad had, but was always available within a few hours and worked with me to balance medications as Dad’s parkinsonianism and fears got worse.

Second, watch all medications. Dad’s serious problems started after he was put on vesicare by his urologist. Who would guess that medications for urinary frequency could have terrible effects on cognition? If I had known about this [online support group], Dad might have had another year or eighteen months of slowly declining normality, instead of a rapid decline into dependency. Later, he had a bad reaction to Benedryl – something you can give to babies.

At first, Dad’s worst problems were confusing times of day. Even before he was in serious trouble, he would show up for PT in the middle of the night. We started with caregivers from breakfast until afternoon nap, then from dinner time to bed time, leaving him alone while he normally slept. If he awoke, he had no way to orient himself in time. I built him a 24 hour, single-handed clock that showed when he should go back to sleep and when he should expect someone to be there. Here are the instructions:

pragmaticcaregiver.blogspot.com/2007/05/id-like-to-buy-clue-part-1.html

[Robin’s note:  In an email exchange with Ann, I noted that probably once a month I recommend the 24-hour clock from the pragmatic caregiver to people in the local support group.  I think it’s a great idea but I’ve never heard from anyone other than the “pragmatic caregiver” that it worked.  I asked Ann if the clock addressed her father’s confusion.] [The 24-hour clock] helped some.  We also put a big cardboard box in hall with a sign saying “It’s night time, go back to bed!”  Sometimes he would call me at 1 or 2 AM and I’d tell him to look at the clock to and see that no-one was supposed to be there.  So, yes, I think it helped, for a while.  Then he needed 24 hour care …

Dad’s temporal disorientation lead to his calling me at all times of the day and night, which got to be a problem as he forgot phone numbers and called other people by mistake. I got him a memory phone without number buttons. He was able to read long after he was able to talk coherently, so I just put names on the buttons rather than pictures.

Learning to adapt to his condition was really hard – from the moment when a shoe-store clerk suggested shoes with velcro closing that I thought he would hate, but the person he’d become found them fascinating and wonderful, to the moment when I realized that he really didn’t need his partial plate – nobody cared if he had front teeth or not … a whole series of letting-go incidents. But so many voices on the [online support group] kept saying that we the caregivers need to move into the world our loved ones now inhabit because they can’t come back to ours … and I learned to live with it. There were bad times when other people had to remind me that he couldn’t come into my world, even if it was Christmas and I just wanted him to go downstairs for dinner.

The voices on this [online support group] also helped me understand that the hospice doctor’s recommendation for a stair lift was good, even though I thought climbing stairs kept him strong and he had never fallen there. Safety is more important than strength when you’ve got a disease that’s going to be fatal.

The [online support group] also helped with legal issues. Before his serious decline, Dad had given me power of attorney, added my name to his bank accounts, and made me his health care proxy. It was on this [online support group] that I learned about what Massachusetts calls the “Comfort Care / Do Not Resuscitate” form. I signed them during hospitalizations in the first few years, but those forms were only binding during the hospital stay. The official form had to be signed by his regular physician. I also got a letter from that doctor saying that he was incompetent due to dementia, which I needed once or twice to get a bank to accept my power of attorney.

After he got so unstable on his feet that he shouldn’t try to walk alone, I found a motion sensor alarm for his bed. His caregivers added a baby monitor, so they could go downstairs to make meals without worrying that he would try to get up and fall.

And then there was Capgras. His problem was more about being in a house that looked like his house than thinking that people were not themselves. By the time that symptom arose, he had great difficulty getting out of the house, so driving him around the block wasn’t a good solution. Generally, talking about the pictures of his parents, my mother, and his boat would convince him that if he wasn’t at home, he was still in a good place.

And all the bathroom stuff – the toilet seat booster, the booster with arms, depends, commode… constantly letting go of who he was, and adapting to who he was becoming. One non-toilet related bathroom accessory was a long shower bench that he could sit on outside the tub, then slide across into the tub and swing his legs in. Even with grab bars all around, the step into the tub was frightening – to him and to his caregivers. The long bench solved that problem without having to redo the bathroom.

Some messages I took selectively, deciding that the quality of Dad’s life mattered more than keeping him completely safe. So he ate whatever he wanted because texture is a lot of the pleasure of food and food was something he enjoyed to the last day of his life. No thickened liquids, no pureed diet. Maybe his pneumonia was caused by aspiration, maybe he would have lived long enough to be completely bedridden, sucking on a bottle if I hadn’t been stubborn about food, but I can live with my decision there.

And hospice and staying at home to the end. He didn’t go to a doctor’s office for the last eighteen months of his life. Regular visits from the hospice nurse kept minor problems from flaring up, and knowing that we had a doctor who would come to the house if something went wrong was a huge relief – to him and to all of us.

Sincerely,
Ann

Robin’s note:  I asked Ann why she hadn’t added “brain donation” to her list, as this was something she had learned about along the way.  She replied that her father was not part of the decision to donate his brain and therefore it was not something that benefited him directly.  She said that there are lots of benefits to her, but were none to her father.  I know that when individuals donating their brains are involved in that decision, they feel that something good is coming out of something bad.  And they are often proud for making such a decision.  This doesn’t work for every family (as many wait until the family member is on his/her death bed before making the decision) but, when it does, it can be a point of pride for the entire family.

Online Resources and Suggested Books for Advance Planning and End of Life

Hope Hospice has a terrific resource list on advance planning and end of life issues.  It’s divided into three sections:
* online resources for patients and families
* online resources for healthcare professional
* suggested books

I’ve copied it below.

Robin

——————–

www.hopehospice.com/resources.html

Resources for Patients and their Families

Caring Connections
http://www.caringinfo.org
(provides Advance Health Directive forms)

Coda Alliance
http://www.codaalliance.org

California Coalition for Compassionate Care
[Editor’s Note:  this is now at coalitionccc.org]

Completing A Life
http://www.completingalife.msu.edu/audioon/welcome.html

Family Caregiver Alliance
http://www.caregiver.org

‘The Five Wishes’
http://www.agingwithdignity.org/five-wishes.php

Hospice Foundation of America
http://www.hospicefoundation.org

Legacies
http://www.legacies.ca

New Lifestyles
http://www.NewLifeStyles.com
Free books that list local skilled nursing facilities, Board and Care homes and Assisted Living

Get Palliative Care
http://www.getpalliativecare.org

National Family Caregivers Association
http://www.nfcacares.org

Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST)
http://www.caPOLST.org

Resources for Healthcare Professionals

Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine
http://www.aahpm.org

American Hospice Association
http://www.americanhospice.org

Caring Connections
http://www.caringinfo.org

Certificate Program for End-of-Life Care
http://www.naropa.edu/
contemplativecare

End of Life/Palliative Education Resource Center
http://www.eperc.mcw.edu

The EPEC Project (Education in Palliative and End-of-Life Care)
http://www.epec.net

Hospice Foundation of America
http://www.hospicefoundation.org

Hospice and Palliative Nurses Association
http://www.hpna.org

National Hospice and Palliative Care Association
http://www.nhpco.org

Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST)
http://www.caPOLST.org

Suggested Reading

The 36 Hour Day (A Family Guide for the Care of People with Alzheimer’s/Dementia)
Nancy L. Mace and Peter V. Rabins

All Kinds of Love: Experiencing Hospice
Carolyn Jaffe and Carol H. Ehrlich

An Ocean of Time: Alzheimer’s Tales of Hope and Forgetting
Patrick Mathiasen, MD

By No Means: The Choice to Forgo Life-Sustaining Food and Water
Joanne Lynn (editor)

Caring in Remembered Ways: The Fruit of Seeing Deeply
Maggie Steincrohn Davis

Choices at the End of Life: Finding Out What your Parents Want Before It’s Too Late
Linda Norlander,RN, MS and Kerstin McSteen, RN, MS

Dying At Home: A Family Guide for Caregiving
Andrea Sankar

Dying Well: The Prospect of Growth at the End of Life
Ira Byock, MD

Dying with Dignity: A Plea for Personal Responsibility
Hans Kung and Walter Jens

Facing Death and Finding Hope: A Guide for the Emotional and Spiritual Care of the Dying
Christine Longaker

Final Gifts: Understanding the Special Awareness, Needs, and Communications of the Dying
Maggie Callanan and Patricia Kelly

The Four Stages of Hope: Using the Power of Hope to Cope With Dying
Cathleen Fanslow-Brunjes, MA, RN

Helping Grieving People: When Tears Are Not Enough: A Handbook for Care Providers
Shep J. Jeffreys, EdD.

I’m Here To Help: A Guide for Caregivers, Hospice Workers, and Volunteers
Catherine Ray

On Death and Dying
Elisabeth K bler-Ross, MD

Share the Care: How to Organize a Group to Care for Someone Who Is Seriously Ill
Cappy Capossela, Sheila Warnock and Sukie

“Role of Palliative and Hospice Care” in Lewy Body Dementia

Despite the fact that this is a publication of the Lewy Body Dementia Association (LBDA), much of this publication applies to those with all neurodegenerative disorders, not just Lewy body dementia (LBD).  Very little of this publication is specific to LBD — really only the mentions of LBD symptoms (including hallucinations and delusions) are specific to LBD.

A new webpage was posted a week ago to the LBDA’s website (lbda.org); it addresses the role of palliative and hospice care. Here’s a link to the webpage and the text from it.

Robin

——————

http://www.lbda.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=feature.display&feature_id=5149

The Role of Palliative and Hospice Care in Lewy Body Dementia
Lewy Body Dementia Association
February 14, 2011

Introduction
What is Palliative Care?
The Clinical Course of Lewy Body Dementia
What is Hospice Care?
Comparison of the Features of Palliative and Hospice Care
What to Ask When Choosing a Hospice?
Additional Resources and Reading

Introduction
Lewy Body Dementia (LBD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease with cognitive, motor, sleep, and behavioral symptoms. Because these symptoms are similar to those of Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease, it can take some time to correctly diagnose LBD. Once the diagnosis has been made, families go through a process of adjustment as they come to understand more about LBD symptoms and treatments and as they try to anticipate what the future will hold. Because there is no cure, it is important for families and physicians to focus on helping people with LBD maintain the highest possible quality of life. In addition, families need emotional support and guidance in their roles as caregivers and advocates. Palliative care and hospice programs have an important place in helping families to achieve these goals.

What is Palliative Care?
The goal of palliative medicine is to improve quality of life by relieving the  symptoms of disease. Accepting palliative care services does not mean that someone has given up hope of a cure. Instead, it signifies recognition that the quality of one’s life is as important as its duration. Generally speaking, palliative care can benefit people of any age at any stage of illness, whether that illness is curable, chronic, or life-threatening. For example, patients with cancer, multiple sclerosis, or emphysema can be helped by palliative care. It is important to note that patients can receive palliative care while actively pursuing curative  treatment for their conditions. In the early and middle stages of LBD palliative care can be handled by the individual’s regular primary care physician and specialists. All LBD symptoms, such as constipation, sleep disorders, and behavioral problems, should be evaluated for their impact on the quality of life of the person with LBD and the primary family caregiver.

Palliative care has an especially important role in LBD because, by default, all current treatments focus on ameliorating symptoms rather than achieving a cure. And because of the multi-system nature of LBD, physicians from different specialties may be providing clinical care for the person with LBD; palliative care providers can coordinate the care provided by multiple physicians and help patients and caregivers express their feelings about which symptoms should be given priority. Another important aspect of palliative care is developing ongoing dialogue between the patient, family, and palliative care providers about whether interventions such as feeding tubes should be used as LBD progresses. Palliative care encourages early discussions about the creation of living wills and advanced healthcare directives.

Palliative care is available in a variety of settings including hospital-based programs as well as programs in skilled nursing and assisted living facilities. For patients who live at home, palliative medicine clinics also provide care on an out-patient basis. Palliative care providers work in concert with the primary care and specialist physicians who treat patients’ LBD and any other conditions they have. The palliative medicine specialist works with a team that typically includes nurses, social workers, physical therapists, dieticians, and pharmacists. The goals of this team are to provide:

* Relief from troubling symptoms
* Assistance in medical decision making
* Emotional and spiritual support
* Care coordination

Using a team-based approach incorporates multiple perspectives on patient care; facilitates communication amongst all health care providers; and creates an effective structure for problem solving. To find a palliative medicine specialist, ask a physician or local hospital for a referral or consult the American Board of Hospice and Palliative Medicine’s website though the link provided in the Resources section at the end of this article.

Many types of health insurance cover the costs of palliative care. Although  neither Medicare nor Medicaid recognize the term “palliative care,” these programs do cover some palliative care medications and treatments as they do other medical care. The palliative care provider will bill Medicare Part B or Medicaid, but the patient or family may be responsible for co-payments or other fees. Ask the palliative care provider about these fees and ask for a fee schedule before beginning to receive care. Similarly, many private health insurers and managed care plans as well as long-term care plans provide some coverage for palliative care. Before beginning palliative care, ask the insurer about the extent of coverage provided.

The Clinical Course of Lewy Body Dementia
The way in which LBD progresses varies from person to person. Some people experience a gradual worsening of LBD symptoms, while others experience periods of more rapid decline. Often LBD cognitive and behavioral symptoms worsen temporarily, because of pain, infection or other medical problem, but may improve once the problem is resolved. And while some LBD treatments may lesson certain symptoms for a period, there is no cure for LBD. The average duration of LBD (from the time of diagnosis to death) is 5 to 7 years.

The initial symptoms of LBD can vary by the individual, and may include either visual hallucinations, acting out dreams or other sleep disturbances, cognitive impairment, or parkinsonian motor signs (these signs include tremor, rigidity, and problems with balance and movement). In general, the symptoms of LBD get worse as the disease progresses over a period of years, but there may be times when symptoms suddenly become much worse or mental abilities may fluctuate unpredictably. Medications that have anticholinergic or antipsychotic properties should be used cautiously, if at all, and may cause sudden and sometimes severe deterioration. In the later stages of the disease, people with LBD are not able to do the basic self-care activities such as bathing, dressing, or toileting and often have increasing difficulties with movement that can affect walking, talking, and swallowing. These more severe problems also make it more difficult for the person with LBD to communicate or participate in activities and may cause weight loss, aspiration pneumonia, or falls that result in broken hips or wrists. When a person with LBD needs constant care to meet their basic needs (like feeding and toileting) and their quality of life is greatly reduced, it is an appropriate time to consider a hospice program.

What is Hospice Care?
A great deal of overlap exists in the ways in which palliative care and hospice care are organized and provided, as outlined in the table below. The primary difference is that hospice programs are intended for people who are in the later stages of an incurable illness that has progressed to the point where providing basic supportive care and measures to ensure comfort take precedence over treatments that attempt to slow disease progression. The goal of hospice care, like palliative care in general, is to offer relief from pain and other symptoms for the patients, while providing emotional support to patients and their families.

Comparison of the Features of Palliative and Hospice Care

Goal
Palliative Care: Pain relief and symptom control; Emotional support
Hospice Care: Same

Curative treatments
Palliative Care: Curative treatments continue as long as individual desires
Hospice Care: Curative treatments cease

Eligibility restrictions
Palliative Care: None
Hospice Care: Physician must certify that individual is unlikely to live more than 6 months

Team
Palliative Care: Palliative care doctor; Primary care and specialist physicians; Nurses; Physical therapists; Dieticians; Social workers; Pharmacists
Hospice Care: Same as Palliative Care team plus: Home health aides; Chaplains; Volunteers

Interventions
Palliative Care: Interventions to alleviate pain and symptoms
Hospice Care: Interventions to alleviate pain and symptoms, may be more aggressive

Coverage
Palliative Care: Medicare Part B; Medicaid; Most private health insurance; Patient/family responsible for co-payments, deductibles, or other fees
Hospice Care: Medicare Part A; Medicaid covers in 45 states; Most private health insurance; Patient/family responsible for small co-payments

While there are no restrictions on who can receive palliative care, hospice care has some eligibility restrictions. The patient’s doctor and the hospice’s medical director must certify that the individual has a terminal illness and has six months or less to live if the illness is allowed to run its course. To receive Medicare’s hospice benefit the patient also must be eligible for Medicare Part A, agree to choose hospice care instead of regular Medicare benefits to treat the terminal illness, and receive care from a Medicare-approved hospice program.

Like palliative care, hospice care teams consist of specially-trained nurses, physicians, social workers, physical therapists, dieticians, and pharmacists. However, the hospice team will also usually include chaplains and volunteers. In addition, a home health aide may come to assist with bathing, dressing, or feeding. Most hospice care is provided in the patient’s home. However, there are hospice programs located in many assisted living and skilled nursing facilities as well as hospital-based and residential programs.

The interventions provided by the hospice team are similar to those previously described for palliative care, but they focus more on keeping the person comfortable in the later stages of their disease. For example, hospice nurses will teach family members how to provide comfort feeding for individuals who have difficulty swallowing, a common symptom in late-stage LBD. Also, hospice physicians may suggest periods of palliative sedation for individuals with LDB who suffer from severe hallucinations or delusions and are severely agitated and cannot sleep.

Hospice care is covered under the Medicare program. If an individual has Medicare Part A, then he or she is entitled to receive hospice services. The way in which hospice services are arranged and paid for under Medicare is more like
a managed care plan than traditional fee-for-service Medicare. This can cause some confusion about what the Medicare hospice benefit will and will not cover. When a person elects to receive Medicare’s hospice benefit and is admitted to a Medicare-approved hospice program, that program receives a fixed payment for each day of that person’s care (a per diem). In return, the hospice program must provide all the care needed for that person’s terminal illness. This includes:

* Physician services
* Nursing care
* Medical equipment (such as a hospital bed or wheelchair)
* Medical supplies
* Medication to control pain or other symptoms
* Hospice aide and homemaker services
* Physical and occupational therapy
* Speech-language pathology services
* Social worker services
* Dietary counseling
* Grief and loss counseling
* Short-term inpatient care (if pain or other symptoms cannot be controlled at home)
* Short-term respite care (up to 5 days at a time)

Out-of-pocket costs for hospice under Medicare are minimal. There is a $5 copayment for each prescription medication and, if inpatient respite care is needed, there is a charge of 5 percent of the Medicare-approved cost of the stay.

Medicare does not permit hospice programs to pay for some services including:

* Treatments to cure terminal illness
* Prescription medications to cure terminal illness
* Care from a hospice provider that was not arranged by the hospice care team
* Room and board in a nursing home, assisted living facility, or residential hospice
* Emergency room or inpatient hospital care or transportation in an ambulance unless these services have been arranged by the hospice team or are unrelated to the terminal illness

If individuals need care for other health problems that are not related to their terminal illness, then this care is not paid for out of the hospice payment but is covered by their regular Medicare benefit. Individuals may continue to see their regular primary care physician and other health care providers for conditions unrelated to their terminal diagnosis (a podiatrist, for example).

Hospice care also is covered by most private insurance carriers, but check the plan’s benefits to determine the extent of coverage available. As of December 2010, hospice care is covered by 45 of the 50 state Medicaid programs. Unfortunately, states are under tremendous pressure to control their Medicaid costs and several states have dropped hospice coverage from their Medicaid
plans within the last year. Individuals should check with their state’s Medicaid program to find out if it covers hospice services. If an individual decides that he or she no longer want hospice care or does not like a hospice program, that person may dis-enroll or switch to a different hospice program at any time for any reason without penalty.

What to Ask When Choosing a Hospice?
There are many hospice programs available — large and small, for-profit and not-for-profit, those with a religious affiliation and those without. Selecting an appropriate program will take some research. Here are some questions to ask:

* Is the hospice run as a for-profit or not-for-profit business?
* Does the hospice belong to the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization?
* Does the hospice have experience with LBD patients?
* Does the hospice have experience dealing with patients who have severe delirium or hallucinations?
* Does the hospice have a full-time physician on staff who can be reached for emergencies at night and on weekends and holidays?
* Is the hospice “open- access” — that is will the hospice provide all services and medications that a patient requires for pain control and symptom relief?
* Does the hospice have access to an inpatient hospital in the event that the patient’s symptoms cannot be adequately handled at home?
* Will the hospice covered all the medications that your loved one is currently receiving (provide a list)? What about atypical antipsychotics (which can be quite expensive)?
* What types of bereavement services does the hospice provide (just written pamphlets or individual/group counseling as well)?

LBD places a tremendous burden on families. Palliative and hospice care helps individuals with LBD to maintain the highest possible quality of life and it provides families emotional support as they cope with their loved ones’
progressively debilitating illness. Now widely available and affordable palliative and hospice care are much needed resources for individuals and families affected by LBD.

Additional Resources and Reading
American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine — locate a palliative medicine physician in your state: http://www.palliativedoctors.org

HospiceDirectory.org- locate a hospice program by state or zip code: http://www.hospicedirectory.org

The Hospice Foundation’s Hospice Information Center — lists caregiver’s tools and a reading list: http://www.hospicefoundation.org/

Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services — Describes Medicare’s hospice benefits in detail:

Click to access 02154.pdf

Caring.com – useful resources about all aspects of caregiving including end-of-life care: http://www.caring.com