List of Illustrations and Tables
Foreword
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. JUST THE FACTS
Serious Chronic Disease in the Last Phase of Life
Living with Chronic Conditions . Shortcomings in Current Care .
The Baby Boom Grows Old . Who Will Provide Care? . “Dying” and
the Problem of Prognostication . Which Illness Will It Be? .
Costs and Who Pays . The Shape of Things to Come
PERSPECTIVE: THE LONELINESS OF THE LONG TERM CARE GIVER
by Carol Levine
2. SEEING THE WORLD DIFFERENTLY
Ideas to Shape Reform
Life Span Perspective . Rethinking the Transition Model .
Misleading Words and Ideas . The “No Surprise” Question .
Trajectories of
Illness across Time . Frequency of Trajectories . Anticipating
Challenges .
Creating and Naming a Category . More Patients, Fewer Caregivers
.Working
Out Patterns of Cost . Summary of Ideas to Shape Reform
PERSPECTIVE : QUALITY COMES HOME
by Donald M. Berwick
3. GOOD CARE FOR SOME PEOPLE SOMETIMES
Hospice . Palliative Care at Home . Palliative Care in Hospitals .
PACE:
All-Inclusive Care . The Chronic-Care Model . Coordinating and
Managing Care . Quality Improvement . Caregiver Programs .
Practice
Guidelines and Audit Tools . Gems and Strategies for Change
PERSPECTIVE IN BRITAIN, PROGRESS IN CARE FOR THE LAST PART OF
LIFE
by Joanne Lynn
4. SURVERYING THE TERRAIN
Opportunities and Challenges
Key Features of Change . Caregivers as a Political Force . The
Business
Case for Change . Promoting Coordinated Care . Barriers
to Reform . Avoiding Low-Impact Reforms
PERSPECTIVE: THE CASE FOR REFORMING U.S. HEALTH CARE
by the Committee on Quality of Health Care in America, Institute of
Medicine
5. GOOD CARE FOR US ALL
Building the Care System to Count On
Reprise of the Current Situation . Trajectories Form a Basis for
Achievable
Excellence . MediCaring: From Promises to Practical Program .
Methods to
Achieve Reform . Reforms to Implement Right Away! . Forging the
Will to Make Improvements Happen
Appendix: An Agenda for Action
References
Index
Joanne Lynn is Director of The Washington Home Center for Palliative Care Studies, Senior Scientist at the RAND Corporation, and President of Americans for Better Care of the Dying. She is the coauthor of Improving Care for the End of Life: A Sourcebook for Health Care Managers and Clinicians (2000) and Handbook for Mortals: Guidance for People Facing Serious Illness (1999), among other books. She has coedited several books, including A Good Dying: Shaping Health Care for the Last Months of Life (1998) and By No Extraordinary Means: The Choice to Forgo Life-Sustaining Food and Water (1986). She has also been a physician serving people living out the end of life in hospices, nursing homes, home care, and hospitals.
"Joanne Lynn is a national treasure - the most articulate, courageous, and scientifically-grounded voice in our nation for the improvement of health care for people approaching the end of life. For the public and professionals alike, her work provides motivation and sound guidance for building the care system we need, a system that we do not yet, by any means, have." - Donald M. Berwick, M.D., M.P.P., President and CEO, The Institute for Healthcare Improvement"
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |