Questions and Answers About Palliative Care, Hospice, and the Palliative Care Information Act

Please Note: The Palliative Care Information Act has been amended. Effective January 14, 2013, "attending health care practitioners" will be required to offer to provide information and counseling to terminally ill patients regarding "other appropriate treatment options should the patient wish to initiate or continue treatment." This is in addition to the current requirement to offer to provide information and counseling regarding prognosis; the range of options, including palliative care and end-of-life options, appropriate to the patient; risks and benefits of options; and pain management. Please review the questions and answers below for further information.

  1. Question: What is palliative care?
  2. Question: Is palliative care the same thing as hospice?
  3. Question: What types of practitioners are subject to the law?
  4. Question: What types of information should an "attending health care practitioner" offer a terminally-ill patient about palliative care and other appropriate treatment options in order to comply with the law?
  5. Question: The statute requires that the offer of information and counseling must be "appropriate to the patient." What does this mean?
  6. Question: The statute requires "attending health care practitioners" to offer information and counseling regarding "other appropriate treatment options" should the patient wish to initiate or continue treatment. What does "other appropriate treatment options" mean?
  7. Question: The law is intended to ensure that terminally ill patients are fully informed about their options for care. What types of options should be considered, and how should I frame them?
  8. Question: Are there any circumstances in which information and counseling about palliative care, end-of-life, and other appropriate treatment options need not be provided?
  9. Question: Who is the "attending health care practitioner?"
  10. Question: If a patient receives care from several health care practitioners, are all of those practitioners required to offer palliative care, information and counseling about end-of-life, and other appropriate treatment options?
  11. Question: If a primary care practitioner diagnoses a terminal condition and refers the patient to a specialist, must the primary care practitioner offer to provide information and counseling about palliative care and other appropriate treatment options?
  12. Question: If the patient receives care from more than one "attending health care practitioner," and they agree to assign to one of them the responsibility to offer information and counseling concerning palliative care, end-of-life, and other appropriate treatment options, should the agreement be documented?
  13. Question: Is there more than one way for an "attending health practitioner" to comply with the law?
  14. Question: The law allows an "attending health care practitioner" to arrange for the offer of the information and counseling to be provided by a professionally-qualified individual. What is a "professionally-qualified individual?"
  15. Question: May an "attending health practitioner" refer or transfer a patient to a trained social worker or nurse for palliative care and end-of-life counseling?
  16. Question: How does the "attending health care practitioner" determine whether a patient's condition is reasonably expected to cause death within 6 months?
  17. Question: When should the offer of information and counseling regarding palliative care and other appropriate treatment options be made?
  18. Question: If information and counseling regarding palliative care and other appropriate treatment options is offered once, should it be offered again?
  19. Question: Should the offer of information and counseling regarding palliative care and other appropriate treatment options be documented?
  20. Question: May an "attending health care practitioner" comply with the law by simply providing the patient with a list of palliative care and other appropriate treatment resources or a link to a website?
  21. Question: What are the patients "legal rights to comprehensive pain and symptom management at the end of life?"
  22. Question: In certain cultures, discussions about the end-of-life are considered taboo. Is there a cultural exemption from this requirement?
  23. Question: Some "attending health care practitioners" may be concerned that discussing the end-of-life may be too distressing for some patients and their caregivers. Is there a therapeutic exemption for such patients?
  24. Question: When the patient lacks capacity to make medical decisions, who should receive the offer of counseling concerning palliative care, end-of-life, and other appropriate treatment options?
  25. Question: What are the penalties for failure to comply with this requirement?

1) Question: What is palliative care?

Answer: Palliative care, as defined by the Public Health Law, is "health care treatment, including interdisciplinary end-of-life care, and consultation with patients and family members, to prevent or relieve pain and suffering and to enhance the patient's quality of life, including hospice care." The Palliative Care Information Act focuses on patients with a medical condition that is expected to cause death within six months, and does not require counseling about palliative care and end-of-life options for other appropriate patients. However, it is important to recognize that palliative care is not just for people who are about to die. Many people assume that palliative care and chronic disease management or disease- modifying therapies are mutually exclusive, but they are not. Palliative care may be provided concurrently with life-prolonging care or as the main focus of care.1

For general information about palliative care, click here.

2) Question: Is palliative care the same thing as hospice?

Answer: Hospice care is a type of palliative care for people who are terminally ill, if the disease runs its normal course. When medical treatments cannot offer a cure, hospice provides care, comfort and support for persons with life-threatening illnesses and their families.

Palliative care, by contrast to hospice, is appropriate at any stage of a serious illness, whether that illness is potentially curable, chronic or life-threatening. Palliative care is appropriate for a much broader group of patients than hospice and, unlike hospice, may be provided in conjunction with curative or life-prolonging treatment.

Both hospice and palliative care offer a personalized plan of care, delivered by an interdisciplinary team, that incorporates what is important to the patient and his or her caregivers in order to achieve the best possible quality of life for patients and families.

For more information about hospice, click here.

3) Question: What types of practitioners are subject to the law?

Answer: Physicians and nurse practitioners, who are serving as a terminally-ill patient's attending health care practitioner, are subject to the requirements of this law. Physician assistants and other health care professionals may also, consistent with their scope of practice, provide information and counseling about palliative care and end-of-life options, but are not required to do so under this law. When a patient with a terminal condition is treated by a physician assistant, the supervising physician must comply with the Palliative Care Information Act, if the physician or the physician assistant has "primary responsibility for the care and treatment of the patient."

To identify an "attending health care practitioner," as defined by this law, see Question 9. For information about satisfying the requirements of this law by arranging for counseling by a qualified professional other than a physician or nurse practitioner, see Question 14 and Question 15.

4) Question: What types of information should an "attending health care practitioner" offer a terminally-ill patient about palliative care and other appropriate treatment options in order to comply with the law?

Answer: The law requires that the "attending health care practitioner" offer to provide the patient with a) information and counseling regarding palliative care and end-of-life options appropriate to the patient, and b) information and counseling regarding other appropriate treatment options should the patient wish to initiate or continue treatment.

Information must include:

  • Prognosis;
  • Range of options appropriate to the patient including palliative care and disease-modifying treatment;
  • Risks and benefits of various options;
  • Patient's "legal rights to comprehensive pain and symptom management at the end of life."

The information and counseling must be "appropriate" to the patient, meaning it must be "consistent with applicable legal, health and professional standards; the patient's clinical and other circumstances; and the patient's reasonably known wishes and beliefs." This includes, but is not limited to, the patient's psychosocial circumstances and cultural and religious beliefs. (Click here for resources on cultural and spiritual considerations in palliative care.)

The "attending health care practitioner" should make clear to the patient and/or to his/her authorized health care decision maker that decisions concerning options rest with the patient and/or his/her decision maker.

Research shows that the majority of patients in the advanced stages of a life-limiting illness and their family members want a great deal of information about their prognosis and options, both for palliative care and disease-modifying treatment. However, a significant minority prefer only limited information. In addition, according to the literature, information needs, patient preferences, and options may need to be revisited as the disease progresses.2 Thus, patient preferences vary, and individualized assessment is necessary.

The Department recognizes that conversations with patients about the end-of-life may be difficult and cannot be approached in a one-size-fits-all manner. Discussions concerning available treatment options, palliative care and end-of-life issues need not, and should not, be the same for every patient. The practitioner should be sensitive to the patient's emotional cues, preferences, and ability to absorb information. More than one conversation is often needed in order to provide the patient with an opportunity to understand and weigh his or her options.

For more information about the elements of palliative care and end-of-life counseling, click here.

5) Question: The statute requires that the offer of information and counseling must be "appropriate to the patient." What does this mean?

Answer: "Appropriate to the patient" means the information and counseling must be "consistent with applicable legal, health, and professional standards; the patient's clinical and other circumstances; and the patient's reasonably known wishes and beliefs." This includes, but is not limited to, the patient's psychosocial circumstances and cultural and religious beliefs. (Click here for resources on cultural and spiritual considerations in palliative care.)

6) Question: The statute requires "attending health care practitioners" to offer information and counseling regarding "other appropriate treatment options should the patient wish to initiate or continue treatment." What does "other appropriate treatment options" mean?

Answer: By "other appropriate treatment options," the law refers to disease-modifying therapies that are intended to control or lessen the impact of the life-threatening disease itself, its medical complications, and/or comorbidities. Such therapies must be appropriate to the patient as defined in the law. See Question 5.

7) Question: The law is intended to ensure that terminally ill patients are fully informed about their options for care. What types of options should be considered, and how should I frame them?

Answer: Therapeutic options include treatments for the serious illness and comorbidities (so-called disease-modifying treatments), supportive services, and medical services that may be considered under the broad approach known as palliative care. Disease-modifying therapies may be undertaken to prolong life, reduce the complications of the disease, or aid in symptom control. Palliative care is a model of care that aims to reduce illness burden and suffering, support coping and adaptation, and maintain quality of life. Some key considerations are:

  • Decisions among options by patients or their authorized decision makers should be guided by prognosis, the availability and medical appropriateness of disease-modifying therapy, and the patient's goals for care. For some patients, these decisions may also be guided by religious or cultural considerations concerning end-of-life care. Although studies have shown that prognostication is difficult, many patients value the knowledge that "time may be limited" or "people with this disease often have months, but not years." To communicate about the medical appropriateness of specific therapies, "attending health care practitioners" must have information about treatment availability, the evidence in support of effectiveness, and the risks or burdens that should be anticipated.
  • The specific treatments or services that constitute palliative care may be provided alone or in conjunction with disease-modifying therapies. Specialist palliative care may be available for selected patients through consultation with a palliative care service, or if appropriate, referral to a hospice agency. For those illnesses with advanced disease-modifying therapies, such as cancer, congestive heart failure and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, there often is a prolonged period during which the best therapeutic approach is one that simultaneously offers aggressive treatment for the disease and aggressive palliative care.
  • The "palliative plan of care" should be sensitive to cultural and religious considerations and may target:
    • Pain and other symptoms
    • Psychiatric disorders or psychological concerns
    • Family disruption or distress, caregiver burden, or social isolation
    • Spiritual distress
    • Problems in coordinating care among many professionals or sites
    • Poor communication leading to uncertainty about the goals of care or to a lack of advance care planning (e.g., no living will, no Medical Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment (MOLST), no health care proxy)
    • Need for practical help at home.
  • In presenting other appropriate treatment options, the attending health care practitioner should provide information about medical treatments appropriate to the patient that are currently available. This may include, as appropriate, directing the patient to the U.S. National Institutes of Health's registry of clinical trials at http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/.
  • Patients (or if the patient lacks medical decision-making capacity, his or her authorized health care decision-makers) must consent to treatment. Informed consent requires that the patient or his or her decision-maker be given appropriate, accurate information about the risks and burdens and likely benefits of each treatment option. Consent to treatment, whether disease-modifying or palliative, should be informed by weighing risks and burdens against benefits.
  • A discussion of options when patients are very ill should help the patient or his or her health care decision-maker understand that individuals vary in how they judge the balance between risks/burdens and potential benefits. Some patients prioritize comfort and support, and unless the benefits of treatment are very likely or very substantial, do not want down-sides like side effects or time away from home to compromise quality-of-life. Other patients choose substantial risk or burdens for even a small chance of benefit. The preferences and values of patients are critical in establishing treatment goals, and patients should be encouraged to communicate them to their physicians and other health professionals.

Discussions about options, therefore, must be individualized and guided by the availability and appropriateness of disease-modifying therapy; the need for palliative treatments and services; and an understanding of the patient's values, preferences and goals. It should be framed by a broad understanding of prognosis, shared with the patient and/or decision-maker, and as accurate an analysis of risk/burden versus benefit as is possible, given the complexities of the situation. Discussion about options often requires multiple conversations.

For more information about the elements of palliative care and end-of-life counseling, click here.

8) Question: Are there any circumstances in which information and counseling about palliative care, end-of-life, and other appropriate treatment options need not be provided?

Answer: The information and counseling must be offered, but it need not be provided if the patient (or his/her authorized decision-maker, when the patient lacks medical decision-making capacity) declines the offer. If the offer is declined, the "attending health care practitioner" should document the decision in the medical record. The practitioner should renew the offer, as appropriate, consistent with changes in the patient's condition and the treatment options available to him/her.

9) Question: Who is the "attending health care practitioner?"

Answer: The "attending health care practitioner" is the physician and/or nurse practitioner who has primary responsibility for care and treatment of the patient with a terminal illness or condition. This may be the responsibility of more than one practitioner. For example, the patient's primary care practitioner and/or one or more specialists may all have primary responsibility for aspects of the patient's care. For more information about the "attending health care practitioner's" responsibilities when the patient is treated by several health care practitioners, see Question 10, Question 11, and Question 12.

10) Question: If a patient receives care from several health care practitioners, are all of those practitioners required to offer information and counseling about palliative care, end-of-life, and other appropriate treatment options?

Answer: All physicians and nurse practitioners who have primary responsibility for care and treatment are subject to the law's requirement to offer palliative care and end-of-life information and counseling. However, when there is more than one health care practitioner primarily responsible, the law allows them to agree to assign that responsibility to one of them. The assignment should be reflected in the patient's medical record. The decision to participate in discussions about palliative care and other options is in the hands of the patient or the patient's legally-authorized decision maker. Once the offer is made, the patient may select the practitioner(s) with whom he/she wishes to discuss options, or he/she may decline the offer.

A patient may have many conditions and several health care providers with primary responsibility for particular aspects of his/her medical care. For example, a patient who has congestive heart failure and end-stage renal failure may be under the care of an endocrinologist, a nephrologist, cardiologist, and an internist or family practice practitioner. Unless they agree to assign the responsibility to offer information and counseling regarding palliative care, end-of-life, and other appropriate treatment options to one of them, each has primary responsibility for the patient and, therefore, must offer to provide information regarding palliative care options.

For information about the role of primary care practitioners in palliative care, see Question 11 and the Role of Primary Care Provider section of the Resources Page

11) Question: If a primary care practitioner diagnoses a terminal condition and refers the patient to a specialist, must the primary care practitioner offer to provide information and counseling about palliative care and other appropriate treatment options?

Answer: It depends on whether the primary care practitioner's role is only diagnosis and referral to another practitioner who assumes primary responsibility for the patient, or whether the primary care practitioner provides, or expects to provide, ongoing care or care coordination for the patient.

If the primary care practitioner's only role in the patient's care is diagnosis and referral, then the primary care practitioner does not have "primary responsibility" for the patient's care and is not required to offer information and counseling concerning palliative care and end-of-life options. On the other hand, if the primary care practitioner provides, or expects to provide, ongoing care or care coordination for the patient and reasonably expects that the patient's condition will cause death within 6 months, he or she must offer to provide information about palliative care, end-of-life options, and other appropriate treatment options, or reach an agreement with the patient's specialist that the specialist will assume that responsibility. For more information about the responsibilities associated with treating a patient who receives care from more than one "attending health care practitioner", see Question 9 and Question 12.

Click here for resources about the role of the primary care practitioner in palliative care.

12) Question: If the patient receives care from more than one "attending health care practitioner," and they agree to assign to one of them the responsibility to offer information and counseling concerning palliative care, end-of-life, and other appropriate treatment options, should the agreement be documented?

Answer: Each "attending health care practitioner" for a given patient should document in the patient's medical record the identity of the practitioner who was assigned, and agreed to accept, the responsibility to offer the information and counseling.

13) Question: Is there more than one way for an "attending health care practitioner" to comply with the law?

Answer: The law requires "attending health care practitioners" to offer information and counseling concerning palliative care and end-of-life options to terminally ill patients. If the offer is accepted, the law provides four alternatives for the "attending health care practitioner:"

  • He or she may provide the information and counseling directly (PHL §2997-c(2)(b); or
  • He or she may reach an agreement with another "attending health care practitioner" who is treating the patient that the other practitioner will provide the information and counseling (PHL §2997-c(1)(b)); or
  • He or she may "arrange for" information and counseling . . . to be provided by another professionally qualified individual" (PHL §2997-c(2)(b)); or
  • If the attending health care practitioner is not willing or does not feel qualified to provide the required information and counseling, he or she must "refer or transfer the patient to another physician or nurse practitioner willing to do so" (PHL §2997-c(3)).

For more information about arranging for information and counseling by another professionally-qualified individual, see Question 14 and Question 15.

14) Question: The law allows an "attending health care practitioner" to arrange for the offer of the information and counseling to be provided by a professionally-qualified individual. What is a "professionally-qualified individual?"

Answer: A "professionally-qualified individual" is a health care professional who is qualified by training and experience to provide information and counseling to terminally-ill patients concerning prognosis, options, risks and benefits of options, and the patient's legal rights to pain management.

15) Question: May an "attending health care practitioner" refer or transfer a patient to a trained social worker or nurse for palliative care and end-of-life counseling?

Answer: The law allows an "attending health care practitioner" to "refer or transfer" the patient for counseling only to another physician or nurse practitioner. The legislation does not authorize a referral or transfer to other types of health care professionals.

However, an "attending health practitioner" may "arrange for" the delivery of information and counseling by other professionally qualified individuals, as well as by a physician or a nurse practitioner. (See Question 14 for a description of a "professionally-qualified individual.")

An "attending health practitioner" "arranges for" counseling by a professional other than a physician or nurse practitioner, if the counseling is part of the plan of care of the attending physician or nurse practitioner – i.e., he or she coordinates the counseling, communicates with the other professional concerning the patient's condition and treatment options, assures that the outcomes of the counseling are reflected in the patient's goals for care and treatment preferences, and will translate those goals for care and treatment preferences into appropriate medical orders.

Social workers are important members of the palliative care team and may be helpful in supplementing the medical information and counseling required under the law. However, a social worker alone typically would not have sufficient medical training to satisfy the requirements of the law. A social worker could support the "attending health care practitioner" by assisting the patient in identifying and articulating his/her goals for care, and values concerning the end of life, and in selecting among treatment options based on those goals and values. A social worker could also facilitate communication among the patient, family members and health care practitioners. Similarly, for patients whose values are informed by religious considerations, a member of the clergy selected by the patient may be helpful in advising the patient about the teachings of his/her religion concerning end-of-life care and how those teachings relate to the patient's particular situation. If a patient appears to need assistance in deciding among options, "attending health care practitioners" may want to ask patients whether a consultation with a social worker or a member of the clergy would be helpful.

16) Question: How does the "attending health care practitioner" determine whether a patient's condition is reasonably expected to cause death within 6 months?

Answer: PHL section 2997-c does not address this question. The determination is based on the clinical condition of the patient, including his/her primary diagnosis and co-morbidities, utilizing the knowledge and experience of the practitioner. The Department does not expect practitioners to predict prognosis precisely in each case. Even when clinical research identifies criteria that support particular prognoses, the criteria typically define "a range of probabilities for mortality in a specific population."3 Clinical judgment is necessary at each stage of an illness to determine the patient's prognosis.4

There are many sources of guidance available to practitioners. Since the Medicare definition of terminal illness for purposes of determining eligibility for hospice5 is very similar to the definition used in PHL section 2997-c, one resource for practitioners is the Medicare fiscal intermediary's local coverage determination for hospice – Determining Terminal Status (L25678). The local coverage determination provides detailed guidelines based on clinical variables with general applicability and disease-specific clinical variables.6 For additional resources, click here.

According to the Medical Guidelines for Determining Prognosis in Selected Non-Cancer Diseases, published by the National Hospice Organization, in assessing a patient's prognosis, health care practitioners should evaluate "the whole person and the entirety of the illness." A patient may "have multiple medical problems, none of which individually amount[s] to a terminal diagnosis, but when taken together indicate a terminal condition."7 Clinical judgment is necessary to evaluate a patient's prognosis.8

In any event, it is often appropriate to discuss palliative care options with seriously-ill patients earlier in the disease progression, when the patient's is expected to live more than six months. In one recent study, early delivery of palliative care prolonged the lives of patients with metastatic, non-small cell lung cancer.9 More research is needed to provide a better understanding of the relationship between palliative care and life expectancy.

For more information, see Question 13 and for additional resources, click here.

17) Question: When should the offer of information and counseling concerning palliative care and other appropriate treatment options be made?

Answer: Under the Public Health Law section 2997-c, information about palliative care and other appropriate treatment options must be offered at the point in time that the physician or nurse practitioner reasonably expects the patient's condition to cause death within six months, whether or not treatment is given.

Given the uncertainty inherent in an individual's prognosis, it is often appropriate to discuss palliative care options with seriously-ill patients earlier in the disease progression, when the patient's lifespan is expected to exceed six months. Early introduction of palliative care optimizes the patient's quality of life and empowers the patient to prepare for the possibility that treatment may fail and to make the most of his/her remaining time, even if he or she continues to pursue curative treatments or life-prolonging care. In fact, palliative care may, itself, extend a patient's lifespan. According to one recent study, early delivery of palliative care prolonged the lives of patients with metastatic, non-small cell lung cancer.10 More research is needed to provide a better understanding of the relationship between palliative care and life expectancy.

The precise moment for the offer of palliative care information and counseling, and the nature of the information provided, are dependent on the patient's individual circumstances, including his or her physical and mental condition. The practitioner should be sensitive to the patient's emotional cues and ability to absorb information. More than one conversation is often needed in order to provide the patient with an opportunity to understand and weigh his or her options. The practitioner may want to extend an offer to provide the information and, if the patient agrees, schedule the counseling for a subsequent session when a family member, close friend, or other advisor selected by the patient, is available to participate.

For more information, click here.

18) Question: If information and counseling regarding palliative care and other appropriate treatment options is offered once, should it be offered again?

Answer: The legislation does not address this question. However, it is important to recognize that patients' needs and desire for information may change over time. Delivering information and counseling about palliative care and other appropriate treatment options is a process and is not typically a one-time event. Information and counseling should be offered as often as necessary to assure that the patient has the information he or she wants at each stage of his or her illness and to permit appropriate control of the patient's symptoms and optimize his/her quality of life. For example, as the patient's situation changes from a medical and/or non-medical perspective, the patient and his/her family may need to re-evaluate the treatment plan to address symptoms, modify treatments, and expand supports as necessary.

19) Question: Should the offer of information and counseling regarding palliative care and other appropriate treatment options be documented?

Answer: Yes, it is appropriate to document the offer for a number of reasons, including: to serve as a reminder of the timing of the offer so that it can be renewed as appropriate, to alert other health care practitioners treating the patient that the offer was made and when, to support reimbursement claims related to the counseling, and to respond to an allegation that the offer was not made.

20) Question: May an "attending health care practitioner" comply with the law by simply providing the patient with a list of palliative care and other appropriate treatment options resources or a link to a website?

Answer: The law allows the practitioner to provide information and counseling orally or in writing. However, the information and counseling must be "appropriate to the patient." "Appropriate" is defined in the law to mean that the information must be consistent with professional standards, the patient's condition and circumstances, and the patient's reasonably known wishes and beliefs. Practitioners are encouraged to engage in a dialogue with the patient about his/her diagnosis, prognosis, goals for care, options for life-prolonging and palliative care, and treatment preferences. Written and web-based materials often serve as excellent supplements to conversations about palliative care and end-of-life issues. However, such material should not replace discussions with the patient and/or his authorized decision-maker.

Alternatively, an "attending health care practitioner" may:

  • arrange for counseling to be provided by another professionally-qualified individual, if the attending health care practitioner coordinates the counseling, communicates with the counseling professional concerning the patient's condition and treatment options, will assure that the outcomes of the counseling are reflected in the patient's goals for care and treatment preferences, and will translate those goals for care and treatment preferences into appropriate medical orders; or
  • refer or transfer the patient to another physician or nurse practitioner.

For more information about options available to attending health care practitioners who would like to arrange for counseling by another professionally-qualified individual or would prefer to refer patients to another physician or nurse practitioner, see Question 14 and Question 15.

21) Question: What are the patients "legal rights to comprehensive pain and symptom management at the end of life?"

Answer: The Palliative Care Information Act does not define these rights. However, patients have a right to expect medical care that is competent and consistent with professional standards. The Board for Professional Medical Conduct "encourages and expects physicians to view effective pain management as a part of quality medical practice for all patients with pain, acute or chronic, including pain as a result of terminal illness."11 In "Pain Management – A Guide for Physicians," the Board stresses:

An adequate assessment of the patient and the pain should be performed and documented. Pain should be considered a fifth vital sign that is viewed as a fundamental assessment of well-being which is regularly monitored.12

"Attending health care practitioners" should offer terminally-ill patients information about the array of options for controlling their pain and symptoms. This includes information about treatments for shortness of breath, fatigue, and nausea and loss of appetite, among others.

For more information about pain and symptom management, click here.

22) Question: In certain cultures, discussions about the end-of-life are considered taboo. Is there a cultural exemption from this requirement?

Answer: The law does not provide an exemption from its requirements based on cultural considerations. Information and counseling about palliative care and end-of-life options must be offered, but if the patient declines the offer, the "attending health care practitioner" is not required to provide it. The patient's decision to decline the information and counseling should be documented in the medical record.

Information about palliative care and end-of-life options should be offered and delivered in a manner that is sensitive to cultural and religious beliefs. "Attending health care practitioners" should be informed about the common beliefs, traditions, and values of the groups they see regularly in their practices. However, they should be careful to recognize that there is great diversity within groups and should treat patients as individuals.13 The beliefs and practices common in a particular group are not necessarily shared by every member of that group. Therefore, "attending health care practitioners" should not assume, based on a patient's race, ethnicity, religion, or national origin, that he or she would accept or decline information about palliative care and end-of-life options. "Attending health care practitioners" should elicit the patient's own perspectives on issues such as goals for care, care management, medical decision-making, role of family members, and the end of life, and respond accordingly.14

The offer of information and counseling required by the Palliative Care Information Act is clinical in nature, not spiritual or religious. "Attending health care practitioners" should understand that patients may request guidance from clergy or other community leaders in order to make treatment decisions that are consistent with their traditions and religious beliefs.

For more information about cultural and spiritual considerations in palliative care, click here.

23) Question: Some "attending health care practitioners" may be concerned that discussing the end-of-life may be too distressing for some patients and their caregivers. Is there a therapeutic exemption for such patients?

Answer: No. The law does not provide a therapeutic exemption from the requirement to offer information and counseling.

It is normal for patients and family members to express grief about a serious, life-limiting illness. Nevertheless, research shows that the majority of patients in the advanced stages of a life-limiting illness and their family members want a great deal of information about their prognosis and options. A significant minority, however, prefer only limited information. In addition, according to the literature, information needs change as the disease progresses.15 Thus, patient and caregiver preferences vary, and individualized assessment is necessary.

Accordingly, Public Health Law section 2997-c requires that "attending health care practitioners" offer information and counseling. The patient (or if the patient lacks medical decision-making capacity, the patient's authorized decision-maker) is entitled to decline the offer. "Attending health care practitioners" can adjust their approach with patients who do not want information about prognosis, palliative care and end-of-life options, by offering to provide the information and giving the patient an opportunity to decline it or to ask for limited information only.

If the patient declines the offer of information about palliative care and end-of-life options, the "attending health care practitioner" is not required to provide the information. The patient's decision to decline the information and counseling should be documented in the medical record.

In any case, information about palliative care, end-of-life, and other appropriate treatment options should be delivered in a manner that is sensitive to the patient's cues, frame of mind and need for hope. "Attending health care practitioners" may seek to encourage hope, while helping the patient to prepare for the possibility that treatment may fail.16

For more information about delivering difficult news to patients, including resources with questions to ask to elicit the patient's concerns and goals for care, click here.

24) Question: When the patient lacks capacity to make medical decisions, who should receive the offer of counseling concerning palliative care, end-of-life, and other appropriate treatment options?

Answer: The person who is legally-authorized to make medical decisions for the patient.

  • For adult patients, the medical decision-maker is typically the health care agent designated in a health care proxy. If there is no health care proxy, and the patient is in a hospital or nursing home, the appropriate surrogate under the Family Health Care Decisions Act (Public Health law Article 29-cc) is the decision-maker. Sometimes, there is a living will or Medical Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (MOLST) form that will reflect the patient's treatment preferences.
  • For minor patients, the medical decision-maker is typically the parent. It is usually best to get both parents involved, if possible.
  • For patients with a developmental disability, there may be a surrogate appointed pursuant to the Surrogate Court Procedure Act.
  • For patients with a mental illness, there may be a guardian authorized to make medical decisions under Article 81 of the Mental Hygiene Law.

Reliance on a health care agent, surrogate or guardian to make health care decisions requires a determination by a physician and another health care practitioner that the patient lacks capacity to make such decisions (in some cases, a determination by two physicians is required). The rules governing capacity determinations and consent by health care agents, surrogates, and guardians are complex. Seek legal counsel, if you are not familiar with these requirements.

For more information about capacity determinations and decision-making by health care agents and surrogate decision-making, click here.

25) Question: What are the penalties for failure to comply with this requirement?

Answer: Violations of the Public Health Law are punishable by a civil penalty of up to $2,000. This penalty may be increased to up to $5,000 for repeat violations within 12 months that were a serious threat to health and safety of the individual or individuals involved. A willful violation of the Public Health Law is punishable by a term of imprisonment of up to 1 year and/or a fine of up to $10,000. In addition, a willful or grossly negligent failure to comply with substantial provisions of state laws governing the practice of medicine, or repeated occasions of negligence, can trigger a medical misconduct action.

Footnotes

  1. According to the National Consensus Project for Quality Palliative Care:
    • "Palliative care is both a philosophy of care and an organized, highly structured system for delivering care. Palliative care expands traditional disease-model medical treatments to include the goals of enhancing quality of life for patient and family, optimizing function, helping with decision making, and providing opportunities for personal growth. As such, it can be delivered concurrently with life-prolonging care or as the main focus of care.
    • Palliative care is operationalized through effective management of pain and other distressing symptoms, while incorporating psychosocial and spiritual care with consideration of patient/family needs, preferences, values, beliefs, and culture. Evaluation and treatment should be comprehensive and patient-centered with a focus on the central role of the family unit in decision making."
    • National Consensus Project for Quality Palliative Care (2009). Clinical Practice Guidelines for Quality Palliative Care, Second Edition, 6; see also World Health Organization, Definition of Palliative Care, available at: http://www.who.int/cancer/palliative/definition/ .
  2. Parker, S.M., Clayton, J.M., Hancock, K., Walder, S., Butow, P.N., Carrick, S., … Tattersall, M.H. (2007). A Systematic Review of Prognostic/End-of-Life Communication with Adults in the Advanced Stages of a Life-Limiting Illness: Patient/Caregiver Preferences for the Content, Style, and Timing of Information. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, 34(1), 81-93.
    • Tattersall, M.H., Gattelarri, M., Voigt, K., & Butow, P. (2002). When the Treatment Goal is Not Cure: Are Cancer Patients Equipped to make Informed Decisions? Journal of Clinical Oncology. Vol. 20, No. 2, 503-513.
    • Innes, S., Payne, S. (2009). Advanced Cancer Patients' Prognostic Information Preferences: A Review. Palliative Medicine. 23(1), 29-39.
    • Back, A.L., Anderson, W.G., Bunch, L., Marr, L.A., Wallace, J.A., Yang, H.B., & Arnold, R.M. (2008) Communication About Cancer Near the End of Life. Cancer, 113(7 Suppl), 1897-910.
  3. Medical Guidelines For Determining Prognosis In Selected Non-Cancer Diseases (2d ed.). The National Hospice Organization, 1996, available at http://aspe.hhs.gov/daltcp/reports/impquesa.htm#appendixC.
  4. Ibid.
  5. Under the Medicare conditions of participation for hospice, a patient is "terminally ill" if he or she "has a medical prognosis that his or her life expectancy is 6 months or less if the illness runs its normal course." 42 CFR §418.3.
  6. Available at: https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coverage-database/details/lcd-details.aspx?ContrNum=00450&ContrTypeId=3&LCDId=25678&ver=33&ContrId=89&Cntrctr=89&name=National+Government+Services%2c+Inc.+(00450%2c+RHHI)&s=41&bc=BBAAAAEAAAAA& .
  7. Medical Guidelines, supra. note 3.
  8. Ibid.
  9. Temel, J.S., Greer, J.A., Muzikansky, A., Gallagher, E.R., Admane, S., Jackson, V.A., … Lynch T.J. (2010). Early Palliative Care for Patients with Metastatic Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer. The New England Journal of Medicine, 363, 733-42.
  10. Temel, J.S., Greer, J.A., Muzikansky, A., Gallagher, E.R., Admane, S., Jackson, V.A., … Lynch T.J. (2010). Early Palliative Care for Patients with Metastatic Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer. The New England Journal of Medicine, 363, 733-42.
  11. Pain Management: A Guide for Patients. (2010) from New York State Board for Professional Medical Conduct is available at http://health.ny.gov/publications/4180.pdf .
  12. Ibid.
  13. LaVera, M., Marchall, P.A., Lo, B., & Koenig, B.A. (2002). Strategies for Culturally Effective End-of-Life Care. Annals of Internal Medicine, 136, 673-670.
  14. Ibid.
  15. Parker, S.M., Clayton, J.M., Hancock, K., Walder, S., Butow, P.N., Carrick, S., … Tattersall, M.H. (2007). A Systematic Review of Prognostic/End-of-Life Communication with Adults in the Advanced Stages of a Life-Limiting Illness: Patient/Caregiver Preferences for the Content, Style, and Timing of Information. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, 34(1), 81-93.
    • Tattersall, M.H., Gattelarri, M., Voigt, K., & Butow, P. (2002). When the Treatment Goal is Not Cure: Are Cancer Patients Equipped to make Informed Decisions? Journal of Clinical Oncology. Vol. 20, No. 2, 503-513.
    • Innes, S., Payne, S. (2009). Advanced Cancer Patients' Prognostic Information Preferences: A Review. Palliative Medicine. 23(1), 29-39.
    • Back, A.L., Anderson, W.G., Bunch, L., Marr, L.A., Wallace, J.A., Yang, H.B., & Arnold, R.M. (2008) Communication About Cancer Near the End of Life. Cancer, 113(7 Suppl), 1897-910.
  16. Back, A.A., Arnold, R.M., & Quill, T.E. (2003). Hope for the Best, and Prepare for the Worst. Annals of Internal Medicine. 138, 439-443.
    • Steinhauser, K., Christakis, N., Clipp, E., McNeilly, M., McIntyre, L., & Tulsky, J. (2000). Factors considered important at the end of life by patients, families, physicians and other care providers. Journal of the American Medical Association, 28, 4(19), 2476-2482.