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Episode 1 - Analyzing Outcomes and Communicating a Crisis:  Current Research in Emergency Medicine/Palliative Medicine Integration - Kei Ouchi, MD, MPH image

Episode 1 - Analyzing Outcomes and Communicating a Crisis: Current Research in Emergency Medicine/Palliative Medicine Integration - Kei Ouchi, MD, MPH

S1 E1 · The PalliEM Podcast
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10 Plays4 years ago

We interview  Kei Ouchi, MD  an up and coming researcher in the field of Palliative Medicine/Emergency Medicine Integration.  We discuss his journey into EM/Palliative Medicine research as well as his insights into how clinicians can engage patients and their families in critical conversations, in the face of serious illness.

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Transcript

Introduction to PallyM Podcast

00:00:01
Speaker
This is the PallyM Podcast, a production of palliem.org at the intersection of palliative and emergency medicine.

Merging Emergency and Palliative Care

00:00:09
Speaker
I'm your host, Justin Bruton.
00:00:11
Speaker
Today I'm joined by Dr. Kay Ucci.
00:00:14
Speaker
Dr. Ucci is an assistant professor of emergency medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School.
00:00:20
Speaker
He's an upcoming researcher with multiple publications in the field of emergency medicine and palliative medicine integration.
00:00:25
Speaker
He is also an associate faculty member of the Department of Psychosocial Oncology and Palliative Care at the Dana-Farber Palliative Care Institute.
00:00:33
Speaker
Dr. Ucci, thank you so much for joining me today.
00:00:36
Speaker
Thank you so much for having me.

Training Experiences and Intubation Outcomes

00:00:39
Speaker
So my first question is, what prompted your interest in researching this unique topic of emergency medicine and palliative care?
00:00:48
Speaker
Well, so when I was in training, I was always thinking that
00:00:54
Speaker
Whenever I save a life, when someone comes in with, let's say, acute respiratory failure, I thought, wow, emergency medicine, when I intubate somebody, it's really lifesaving.
00:01:08
Speaker
And this was a really important moment for me to kind of appreciate what emergency medicine practice is all about.
00:01:17
Speaker
And I trained in internal medicine as well.
00:01:21
Speaker
And when I switched service to internal medicine from emergency medicine a few weeks later, sometimes I find patients who are older and I intubated actually still in the hospital.
00:01:36
Speaker
And we had this one case where a patient's family member told me after a few weeks of
00:01:44
Speaker
coming out of ICU that he would never wanted this had he known that this was the outcome after the intubation.
00:01:54
Speaker
Well, this is when I started to think twice about whether it's always the right thing to help people with acute respiratory failure with intubation, especially when patients are older and having serious life limiting illness.
00:02:13
Speaker
Yes, it's so true.
00:02:14
Speaker
You mentioned, you know, we think about the interventions we can do, but then after the fact, you see what the outcomes of that is and how much it would change decision making.
00:02:23
Speaker
You've done a lot of work in that area of trying to improve communication in the emergency room because it's a unique environment.

Challenges in Emergency End-of-Life Care

00:02:30
Speaker
In that same vein, what are some of the unique issues that arise when you're trying to address critical illness and end-of-life care in the emergency room?
00:02:40
Speaker
Well, I think we have to kind of think about this in perspective, because traditional emergency medicine training doesn't really address this directly.
00:02:51
Speaker
So the fact is, there are more and more older adults are presenting to the emergency department in our society in America.
00:03:02
Speaker
And this is because human beings have never lived this long before.
00:03:08
Speaker
And we know that as a result, practice in the emergency department is slowly changing, not only from acute trauma-like care, to also to have to address goals of care for patients who are living with serious life-limiting illness.
00:03:28
Speaker
And this is apparent because 75% of older adults would visit the emergency department in the last six months of life
00:03:37
Speaker
And as they get sicker, they come to emergency department more often.
00:03:43
Speaker
When in thinking about this context, we have to also be mindful that everything that we were taught in emergency medicine training is not necessarily sometimes aligned with what patients would actually want.
00:04:01
Speaker
And it's up on us, emergency department clinicians, to figure out exactly how patients want to be treated when they're facing a medical crisis.

Outcomes for Older Adults in Respiratory Failure

00:04:16
Speaker
Absolutely.
00:04:17
Speaker
And one of the things that you've spent some time on is looking at the outcomes that people have.
00:04:23
Speaker
As you mentioned before, that family member noted that their family, their loved one would have made a different decision possibly if they had known what the likely outcome was.
00:04:31
Speaker
And you mentioned that
00:04:32
Speaker
the frequency with which older adults go to the emergency department in the last phase of life.
00:04:37
Speaker
What kind of patterns have you seen as far as, say, respiratory failure when an older person over age 65 or older than that presents to the ED and is in respiratory failure?
00:04:48
Speaker
What kind of outcomes can they have from that that are maybe less than desirable?
00:04:55
Speaker
Thank you.
00:04:56
Speaker
So when older adults with serious life-limiting illness come to the emergency department in acute respiratory failure, that's already, and if you're considering intubation as one of the interventions that might have to be performed in the emergency department, that's already a pretty bad news because we know from literature that about one in three of those folks will likely die in a hospital after intubation.
00:05:24
Speaker
So when you're considering this intervention in the emergency department, it is a critical moment for patients and their surrogates to really grasp the situation.
00:05:36
Speaker
At the same time, emergency physicians must grasp the situation too and outlook of what you're about to perform.
00:05:44
Speaker
Because patients who are lucky enough to survive, most of them don't end up going home.
00:05:51
Speaker
In fact, most of them will end up in a nursing home or long-term acute care hospitals where they would have pretty limited care.
00:06:01
Speaker
functional status at that time.
00:06:04
Speaker
And we have to think about whether that's something that patients would have actually wanted in his or her life.
00:06:10
Speaker
And in emergency department, we're faced to complete this conversation where this decision-making has to be rapidly decided.
00:06:24
Speaker
And we're asked to basically complete a conversation that's harder to do than any other situation in clinical medicine.
00:06:33
Speaker
Yeah, it's so true.
00:06:34
Speaker
It's very time sensitive.
00:06:35
Speaker
And one of the things that you mentioned that's interesting is you talked about how outcomes have changed and people are living longer.
00:06:41
Speaker
And one thing that I think is interesting is if you look at what people died from 100 years ago, and it was a lot of acute illness, infections, things like that, that people died very suddenly, there wasn't this long, this prolonged process.
00:06:54
Speaker
And as we've advanced in our ability to treat things like COPD and CHF, people get to a much more advanced state of disease.
00:07:01
Speaker
But then they're in and out of the hospital sometimes with this significant illness.
00:07:05
Speaker
And it's whereas people used to have some big catastrophic event.
00:07:10
Speaker
And that was the most likely cause of death.
00:07:12
Speaker
Now we have some of those events still.
00:07:14
Speaker
But we have these periods of time where people go through this prolonged chronic illness with superimposed acute illness.
00:07:22
Speaker
And you're right.
00:07:23
Speaker
A lot of them end up in the nursing home.
00:07:24
Speaker
If they end up surviving the hospitalization, they end up with a very big change in their functional status.
00:07:29
Speaker
So you mentioned that it's very time sensitive.
00:07:33
Speaker
We're having these conversations and we don't have a lot of time to be able to talk about these things.
00:07:37
Speaker
What are some other barriers that you see to trying to provide palliative care in the emergency room?

Complexities of Shared Decision-Making

00:07:44
Speaker
Well, in terms of this particular decision making about whether to intubate someone or not and whether that is aligned to patients' values and goals, there are many different barriers to successfully come up with this shared decision making.
00:07:59
Speaker
First, patient's really sick and we have to make a decision quickly so that we have a very limited time of making this decision, which also results in heightened emotion for patients and surrogates about what to do next because they are really sick and they're scared or anxious or something is going on in their lives that are prohibiting
00:08:28
Speaker
rational decision making that they would usually be able to do in other circumstances.
00:08:35
Speaker
And third, there's a lot of clinical uncertainty about prognosis.
00:08:42
Speaker
Yes, one in three people may die in the hospital, and yes, most people may survive and will have a prolonged course of recovery with limited functional abilities.
00:08:58
Speaker
And how certain can we be at describing these prognosis?
00:09:04
Speaker
So these are all different things that could make this decision-making very difficult.
00:09:10
Speaker
And we haven't been able to systematically train our trainees in having these conversations yet in emergency department.

Values in Rapid Decision-Making

00:09:21
Speaker
You bring up a good point where you talked about there is uncertainty in prognosis.
00:09:26
Speaker
It's early on.
00:09:27
Speaker
And while we do have data that suggests potential outcomes that someone may have, it's an older adult with a critical illness, one of the things I think you touch on is really it's somewhat about informed consent.
00:09:38
Speaker
Because to me, it seems like so many times, there's so many other things in medicine where there's kind of a rigorous informed consent process that
00:09:46
Speaker
And in this case, we think of life support and other interventions as sort of a default.
00:09:51
Speaker
And we don't necessarily think about it as informed consent in the same way, because we may be getting somebody through an illness.
00:09:57
Speaker
But again, there's a potential functional outcome at the end of that that may be undesirable.
00:10:02
Speaker
So I wonder, I want your thoughts on this.
00:10:04
Speaker
But to me, it seems like by having the conversation, regardless of what the patient or the family member ends up choosing, they are
00:10:12
Speaker
likely getting a more informed understanding of what the possible outcomes are.
00:10:17
Speaker
And even if they, you know, which way they decide to go on the matter, they're at least prepared for an outcome, for the range of outcomes that are possible.
00:10:26
Speaker
What are your thoughts on that?
00:10:28
Speaker
Well, that's what we would hope.
00:10:31
Speaker
And in reality, what gets in the way of informed consent is that
00:10:38
Speaker
those things that I mentioned, the clinical prognostic uncertainty, as well as heightened emotions about decision making, basically about life or death.
00:10:49
Speaker
And, you know, those things will definitely get in the way of informed decision making.
00:10:54
Speaker
And what happens in these crisis moments is that
00:11:00
Speaker
a true informed consent, meaning explaining what the benefits, potential harms, and alternatives of a treatment decision-making is, and asking people to make a decision, sometimes is really unfair, given that the patient might be so sick and they're in a heightened emotional state.
00:11:26
Speaker
Therefore, we would recommend a shared decision-making with patients or surrogate and the clinician.
00:11:35
Speaker
And the clinician has to be able to sort of kind of understand where patients might be coming from and what his or her values and goals are in life.
00:11:45
Speaker
and incorporate medical decisions that would actually make sense in his or her head and make a recommendation about exactly what might be aligned with patient's goals.
00:11:59
Speaker
This is not exactly informed consent.
00:12:02
Speaker
It's definitely a shared decision making where clinician has to also take the burden of this difficult decision with the patient or surrogate.
00:12:14
Speaker
That's very true.
00:12:15
Speaker
And I was thinking about the piece that you had in Annals of Emergency Medicine that goes through having these conversations with patients who present in respiratory failure and having these critical time-sensitive conversations in the emergency room.
00:12:28
Speaker
And there's some...
00:12:30
Speaker
there's a process that you go through in that article about ways to ask questions and you use typical palliative care principles and how to ask these questions to get to the kind of the heart of the matter with making these decisions.
00:12:42
Speaker
What are some of the ways we should ask questions of these families and these patients in the emergency room that maybe aren't our typical approach?

Alternative Questioning in Patient Preferences

00:12:53
Speaker
Typical approach in emergency medicine, I think.
00:12:58
Speaker
in my mind, would be to ask patients and surrogates, would he or she may want X, Y, or Z?
00:13:09
Speaker
Now, what thoughts have you had about getting X, Y, or Z, which are mostly procedures like intubation?
00:13:17
Speaker
And I don't think that method of
00:13:22
Speaker
understanding patients' preferences would work in this situation given the prognostic uncertainty that is still difficult even for clinicians to describe.
00:13:37
Speaker
It would be unfair for us to expect patients and surrogates to understand that at the same level that we do in this given short amount of time that they have to make this decision.
00:13:50
Speaker
So the typical way of asking for preferences like this, I don't think would be helpful in these situations.
00:13:59
Speaker
Instead, we would recommend that we ask for patients' and surrogates' understanding of where he or she may be today and, you know, go through other palliative care principal questions that I outlined in the manuscript in Annals of Emergency Medicine.
00:14:22
Speaker
Well, and one of the things you touch on there that I think is really important is what was their functional status?
00:14:28
Speaker
You know, what would their, you know, if they were here with us, what would they think if we could give them the same information that you have right now?
00:14:35
Speaker
I think those are really helpful to touch on.
00:14:37
Speaker
And, you know, one question I have too is, you know, these conversations can be challenging and they can be kind of time consuming.
00:14:43
Speaker
What would you say to the physician who's worried about, well, yeah, I can engage in these conversations and I see that it's important, but how am I supposed to have this kind of a conversation in a time sensitive way while I'm also still managing a busy emergency room?
00:14:56
Speaker
What are ways that you can have a really meaningful conversation and it doesn't necessarily have to be
00:15:02
Speaker
excessively long if the right questions are asked and maybe the family of the patient are a little prepared to discuss that.

Prioritizing Critical Care Preferences in Crisis

00:15:10
Speaker
Well, I think one thing that we must all keep in mind as emergency department clinicians is that our conversations in these crisis moments when patients are, for example, in impending respiratory failure requiring intubation, our primary task is not to explore everything that is possible to explore, but
00:15:34
Speaker
but to really determine, you know, really identify patients who would consider outcomes after intubation really worse than dying or something similar to that.
00:15:46
Speaker
That's what we're trying to identify.
00:15:49
Speaker
A lot of times when we talk to patients or surrogates, they have not really thought about these things before.
00:15:57
Speaker
And it's really, they just need a little more time to figure this out or think through this and not in the heightened emotional state in emergency department.
00:16:07
Speaker
So, you know, a lot of these times,
00:16:11
Speaker
It's unfair to push them to make a decision, and we just have to lean on the side of intubating them and having them process this information that you just shared with them.
00:16:22
Speaker
So that's our task as emergency physicians.
00:16:25
Speaker
And if you actually go through the steps that are outlined in the code status conversation guide, I think most palliative medicine clinicians would agree that it would actually save time to get to the bottom of how much decision making is even possible in this situation.
00:16:49
Speaker
That's what I would say about that.
00:16:52
Speaker
Yeah, that's a good point.
00:16:53
Speaker
It's interesting to talk about this because I just had an ED resident yesterday I was discussing this with, and he's a third-year resident, so he's thinking about how is his own practice going to work.
00:17:03
Speaker
And we were talking about this type of scenario, and I was telling him, you're going to have situations where, like you said, they're going to need more time, and you don't need to push them to make a decision if they're not ready to make a decision or they're not ready to de-escalate care, even if the prognosis may not be great.
00:17:18
Speaker
And one of the other things that we talked about was you have patients who,
00:17:22
Speaker
They may have had multiple hospitalizations.
00:17:24
Speaker
They may have had multiple kind of recent events or, or recent decline where the family's kind of waiting for that, waiting for the physician to kind of say, this may be a transition point.
00:17:34
Speaker
This may, you know, they're, they're, they're getting sicker and you're not forcing a decision, but they're kind of, they maybe are a little more prepared.
00:17:40
Speaker
And those situations, like you said, that if an outcome, if there's a potential outcome after intubation, that's worse than death for them, like prolonged nursing care or, or,
00:17:48
Speaker
or significant disability beyond what they've experienced before, then they may be a little more prepared or the family may be more prepared to say, yeah, let's maybe not go through with all this.
00:17:58
Speaker
But I agree.
00:17:59
Speaker
There's times where we just, we need to do the aggressive measures and we've at least started the conversation and they can think about it and whatever the outcome is, at least they're a little more aware of the severity of the situation on the front end.
00:18:12
Speaker
And I agree too.
00:18:13
Speaker
I think that some of these questions, they can be very insightful and they don't necessarily have to be lengthy conversations.
00:18:19
Speaker
I found that asking how they were doing before, have they been sick a lot recently?
00:18:24
Speaker
Have they noticed a pattern of decline?
00:18:26
Speaker
I think in there you talk about wishes, you mentioned what outcomes would they consider that are worse than death?
00:18:31
Speaker
And I think it's a pretty concise guide while still providing some really robust information, which I appreciate.
00:18:37
Speaker
So along those lines, what do you think...
00:18:40
Speaker
The general ED physician, what are maybe three things ED physicians can do better as a group to provide more goal-concordant care to some of our sickest patients in the emergency room?
00:18:54
Speaker
Hmm.
00:18:55
Speaker
I think...

Integrating Palliative Care in Emergency Settings

00:18:57
Speaker
One thing we can do is definitely to pay attention to patients that you're seeing and sort of determining which patients may benefit from either palliative care consults or interventions.
00:19:15
Speaker
starting in emergency department.
00:19:17
Speaker
So that's basically to identify which patients that you're seeing, you're seeing 30 or so patients in your shift, let's say, which of those patients may benefit from palliative care interventions.
00:19:29
Speaker
So that's one thing that emergency clinicians could do to try to improve ultimate goal concordant care, maybe not within the emergency department, but ultimately for the patients.
00:19:42
Speaker
because we do definitely see a handful of patients who would benefit from, let's say, goals of care conversations or symptom management palliative care teams.
00:19:54
Speaker
That's definitely one thing that you can do.
00:19:56
Speaker
The second thing that we could do in emergency department is to really identify
00:20:03
Speaker
improve the communications that we could do in determining patient's code status.
00:20:10
Speaker
Because this is one time in emergency department that you, the emergency department clinician, will certainly dictate what will happen to the patient in short term, as well as long term for patients living with serious life limiting illness.
00:20:28
Speaker
emergency department intubation is a critical moment that will alter a patient's clinical trajectory.
00:20:35
Speaker
And we have to pay attention to exactly how to have these conversations with the patients who are coming into emergency department for acute respiratory failure.
00:20:47
Speaker
The third thing that we may be able to do would be to try to incorporate principles of palliative care and geriatrics into the practice of emergency medicine.
00:21:01
Speaker
I think we just don't do enough to identify
00:21:06
Speaker
geriatric syndromes in emergency department, because most of us think that they may not have immediate implications to intervene in emergency department.
00:21:18
Speaker
If patients are, let's say, suffering from recurrent falls or delirium, and because our society is aging and we're going to see more and more patients who are older and having serious life-loaning illness in emergency department,
00:21:34
Speaker
we have to create pathways for these seriously ill older adults to be appropriately triaged and cared for from the emergency department by incorporating these principles in emergency medicine practice.

Recognizing Geriatric Syndromes in Emergency Care

00:21:53
Speaker
Yeah, that's really true about what you said about geriatric syndromes.
00:21:56
Speaker
And just, I think sometimes, and maybe this is just me, I appreciated it a lot more after I did my palliative care training, but just things like falls, where initially it seems like, well, yeah, this is just something that as people get older, their balance gets worse and they start to fall.
00:22:11
Speaker
But just the prognostic implications of recurrent falls, like you're saying.
00:22:16
Speaker
And also what things need to be done to address the problem.
00:22:20
Speaker
So often our thought is, okay, do I need to scan this person's head?
00:22:23
Speaker
Are they on blood thinners?
00:22:24
Speaker
Do they have a head bleed?
00:22:25
Speaker
And maybe this is just me, but I feel like we might look at their medicines.
00:22:30
Speaker
We might think about things that are contributing, but the sense may be we just need to figure out if they're injured and then get them back to wherever it is they need to go instead of...
00:22:38
Speaker
What else can be done?
00:22:39
Speaker
Do they need physical therapy?
00:22:41
Speaker
Do they need something else that's going to maybe even prevent that next really serious fall or a medication change if they're on something that's going to be contributing to their balance issues?
00:22:50
Speaker
So I agree.
00:22:51
Speaker
I think there is some preventative medicine that we can do in the emergency room that really actually doesn't take that much extra time, but it can save us time afterwards and it identifies deeper needs for the patients.
00:23:01
Speaker
What are future issues that you think ED palliative care research needs to continue to address?

Need for Rigorous Studies in Emergency Palliative Care

00:23:10
Speaker
Yes.
00:23:10
Speaker
So all these things that we have just talked about,
00:23:18
Speaker
they haven't really been shown in rigorous clinical studies to demonstrate direct benefit to patients.
00:23:28
Speaker
For example, having better, well-structured goals of care conversations to determine code status, will that actually change the patient's care or outcomes?
00:23:41
Speaker
We don't really know.
00:23:43
Speaker
These things clinically would make sense to do.
00:23:46
Speaker
And those who know more about this or trained in palliative care can see the clinical difference in their practice patterns as well as patient outcomes.
00:23:58
Speaker
However, they have not really been rigorously studied to show direct patient benefit.
00:24:06
Speaker
So it's really important for us to not only hang our hats on what we believe clinically is helping patients, but also at the same time, try to demonstrate a clinical benefit to patients by incorporating all these principles that we have discussed.
00:24:26
Speaker
And that has not been well established in emergency medicine literature or palliative care literature.
00:24:33
Speaker
And it's on us to rigorously study these so that we know what's going to actually help the patients.
00:24:40
Speaker
And that has not been done yet.
00:24:45
Speaker
Well, and one of the things you and I had talked about previously is that there are certain aspects of emergency palliative care that are difficult to study inherently.
00:24:54
Speaker
One thing that comes to mind, and that's probably part of the reason why it's difficult to assess benefit of some of these things, is just communication, for example.
00:25:01
Speaker
In a clinic setting, you can do communication interventions and you can randomize patients and the acuity is not so high.
00:25:09
Speaker
So you can get a sense for how different communication methods may directly impact decision-making.
00:25:15
Speaker
or patient perception of care.
00:25:17
Speaker
But in the emergency room, especially when you're talking about patients with acute respiratory failure, it's very difficult to do any kind of randomized study in communication practices because most of us, for one, in an emergency and when time is limited, we're going to default to whatever practice we have.
00:25:34
Speaker
And it would be very difficult to get clinicians to kind of adhere to a particular model under those circumstances.
00:25:39
Speaker
And in addition, I think randomization becomes a big issue.
00:25:42
Speaker
So what are some ways that I know we've talked about it before, but what are some ways that you can analyze sort of the benefits of providing this education to patients and providers that kind of get around some of those inherent challenges of studying acutely ill patients in the emergency room?

Pragmatic Trials in Real-World Settings

00:26:01
Speaker
I think there are many different ways in which we can change clinical practice through research.
00:26:08
Speaker
And one of the ways is to conduct more pragmatic clinical trials, unlike randomization
00:26:18
Speaker
based on individual patients or individual emergency departments.
00:26:23
Speaker
For example, I am involved in Dr. Corita Gretzen's pragmatic trial study right now that looks at educating emergency department clinicians in primary palliative care skills.
00:26:41
Speaker
And this is done through a pragmatic design where a unit of randomization is time rather than individual emergency department or individual patients or individual clinician groups.
00:26:55
Speaker
So that over time, if you implement these primary palliative care interventions in different emergency departments, if it does work, it should show a difference in healthcare utilization of patients that we care for.
00:27:11
Speaker
And that's one of the ways in which we can tackle this difficult problem of actually conducting rigorous studies that are scientifically solid.
00:27:22
Speaker
We, in clinical medicine, are sort of encouraged to do pragmatic design trials where we're moving away from individual level intervention or
00:27:35
Speaker
outcome assessment.
00:27:36
Speaker
Rather, we want to sort of do it in a pragmatic way, meaning in a real world type of way.
00:27:45
Speaker
Because if we want to make a difference, we can't just do it in a really controlled randomized trial setting, we have to do it in real world to see if it's going to make a difference.
00:27:57
Speaker
So more and more, there are study designs that are coming up that
00:28:03
Speaker
try to address at that problem of doing in the real world.
00:28:08
Speaker
And I think that's the direction, the overall direction in which that this, you know, palliative care and emergency medicine research must move towards as well.
00:28:21
Speaker
Absolutely.
00:28:21
Speaker
And that makes sense because then your interventions are much more applicable because it hasn't just occurred in a vacuum.
00:28:27
Speaker
But like you said, it's more of a real world setting.
00:28:30
Speaker
So it should hopefully translate when carried over to regular clinical practice.

Closing Remarks and Invitation to Explore

00:28:35
Speaker
Well, thank you, Dr. Ucci, so much for joining us today.
00:28:38
Speaker
And I really appreciate the work you're doing in pioneering a lot of advancements in this field and impacting the way we continue to care for these patients.
00:28:48
Speaker
Thank you so much.
00:28:49
Speaker
Well, thank you so much for talking to me.
00:28:51
Speaker
Really appreciate it.
00:28:52
Speaker
And I think it's a really important work to try to get this out to everyone.
00:28:58
Speaker
For more information on current topics in the fields of palliative and emergency medicine, please visit pallium.org.