QMCLogo 500w75hPCQC Virtual Quality Matters Conference 2023
December 14-15, 2023

Continuing Education Details

 

Joint Accreditation Statement

In support of improving patient care, this activity has been planned and implemented by Amedco LLC and Palliative Care Quality Collaborative. Amedco LLC is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.
Amedco Joint Accreditation #4008163.

 Nurses (ANCC) Credit Designation

 Amedco LLC designates this activity for a maximum of 7.50 ANCC contact hours.

Physicians (ACCME) Credit Designation

Amedco LLC designates this live activity for a maximum of 7.50 AMA PRA Category 1 CreditsTM. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.

Social Workers (ASWB) Credit Designation

As a Jointly Accredited Organization, Amedco is approved to offer social work continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) Approved Continuing Education (ACE) program. Organizations, not individual courses, are approved under this program. State and provincial regulatory boards have the final authority to determine whether an individual course may be accepted for continuing education credit. Amedco maintains responsibility for this course. ASWB Learner Level: Intermediate. Social Workers completing this course receive 7.50 GENERAL continuing education credits.

The following state boards accept courses offering ASWB ACE credit for Social Workers: AK, AL, AR, AZ, CA, CO, CT, DC, DE, FL, GA, HI, ID, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, ME, MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, MT, NC, ND, NE, NH, NM, NV, OH, OK*, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, VA, WA, WI, WV*, WY
*OK: Accepts ASWB ACE for live, in-person activities but not for ethics and/or online courses.
*WV: Accepts ASWB ACE unless activity is held live in West Virginia.
The following state boards accept courses offering ASWB ACE credit for Counselors: AK, AR, AZ, CA, CO, CT, DC, FL, GA, IA, ID, IL, IN, KS, MA, MD, ME, MO, ND, NE, NM, NH, NV, OK*, OR, PA, TN, TX, UT, VA, WI, WY
MI: No CE requirement
The following state boards accept courses offering ASWB ACE credit for MFTs: AK, AR, AZ, CA, CO, FL, IA, ID, IN, KS, MD, ME, MO, NC, NE, NH, NM, NV, OK*, OR, PA, RI, TN, TX, UT, VA, WI, WY
AL MFTs: Credits authorized by NBCC or any other state licensing agency will be accepted.
MA MFTs: Participants can self-submit courses not approved by the MAMFT board for review.
MI: No CE requirement.
The following state boards accept ASWB ACE credit for Addictions Professionals: AK, CA, CO, CT, GA, IA, IN, KS, LA, MO, MT, ND, NM, NV, OK, OR, SC, WA, WI, WV, WY

 

 


QMCLogo 500w75hPCQC Virtual Quality Matters Conference 2022
December 8-9, 2022

 

Why Quality Matters: Where You Sit Determines What You See

To understand how to implement quality, we must first understand what quality is. This has many definitions and can mean different things to different people from payment incentives, to program performance, to care standards. To help us synthesize these perspectives, our keynote speaker for first day of QMC 2022, Dr. Tammie Quest, discussed Why Quality Matters and how our perspectives can determine our opinions on quality.Tammie Quest, MD FAAHPM, Director, Emory Palliative Care Center

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The State of Our Field

A major component of defining quality is creating measurable bars to ensure standardization. Understanding how we define palliative care teams and structure is important to creating a standard definition for palliative care programs. During this session, our presenters provide an overview of PCQC Programmatic data from 2020-2021 to help us understand the current state and evolution of our field.MaggieRogers, MPH, Director of Research & Analytics, Center to Advance Palliative Care

Fred Friedman, Registry Manager, Palliative Care Quality Collaborative

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Managing Opioid Complexity in Individuals with Serious Illness

Quality starts with the work our clinicals do. One of clinical pillars of quality-based palliative care is the management of pain of our patients and the role of opioid prescriptions as an intervention. In this session, our presenters discuss the complexity of opioid prescribing in patients with serious illness. They review the available evidence on chronic pain, long-term opioid therapy, and opioid misuse/use disorders in the general population. Our presenters apply the relevant and emerging evidence in palliative care populations to generate best practices that can inform future quality metrics.

Jessica Merlin, MD PhD MBA, Professor, University of Pittsburgh 
Katie Fitzgerald Jones, PhD APN CARN-AP, Postdoctoral Fellow and Nurse Practitioner, Massachusetts General Hospital

 Download Slides

 

Learning from PCQC’s Clinical Quality Data

Understanding clinical quality improvement requires an understanding of standards, measures, and benchmarks. Only by knowing what you need to measure, where you stand in your performance, and how to interpret data to put into action can you see true improvement. In this session, Dr. Steve Pantilat, President of the PCQC Board of Directors, explores PCQC’s clinical, patient-level outcome data, highlighting areas of high performance, as well as how to use these data to improve care.

StevePantilat, MD MHM FACP FAAHPM, Kates-Burnard and Hellman Distinguished Professor in Palliative Care and the Chief of the Division of Palliative Medicine, University of California San Francisco

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Patient Reported Outcomes – Benefits and Drawbacks

As our field evolves, we are understanding more about the value of capturing the patient voice in defining and delivering high-quality care. Patient Reported Outcomes (PROs) offer us an avenue to dive deeper into the patient experience, providing us further insight into patient preferences of care. During this panel, our panelists discuss evolution of PROs in patient care and quality measurement.

Panelists
Katherine Ast, MSW LCSW, Director of Quality & Research, American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine  Download Slides
Ben Hamlin, DrPH, Senior Research Informaticist, National Committee for Quality Assurance  Download Slides
Angela M. Stover, PhD, Assistant Professor of Health Policy and Management, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill  Download Slides

Moderator
Laura Hanson, MD MPH, Professor of Geriatric Medicine and Medical Director, UNC Palliative Care

 

In partnership with NHPCO, a Panel Discussion: Quality Metrics Across the Continuum of Advance Illness & Support Care


To create uniform standards of care, we must work together to better understands the complexities in defining collecting quality across the serious illness spectrum. During this session, Aparna Gupta, Vice President of Quality at the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization facilitated a discussion with our panelists to discuss the role of quality and quality measurement across the continuum of advanced illness and supportive care.

Panelists
Kathleen Kerr, Healthcare Consultant and Partner, Transforming Care Partners
Rory Farrand, MS MA MSN, APRN-BC, Vice President, Palliative and Advanced Care, National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization
Joe Rotella, MD MBA HMDC FAAHPM, Chief Medical Officer, American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine

Moderator
Aparna Gupta, DNP FACHE CPHQ, Vice President Quality, National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization

 

Top 10 Pearls in Palliative Care Quality

Quality improvement provides a framework to strive towards an ideal, providing the best palliative care possible. However, in practice, structured quality improvement is often pushed as a secondary priority with competing clinical and administrative duties, making it difficult to gain momentum towards a culture of quality. Within QI, perfection can often be the enemy of the good and starting with a foundational set of skills can help jumpstart QI work within your program. To help us establish a baseline set of QI principles to build that foundation, Dr. Arif Kamal shared his top 10 pearls of quality improvement for palliative care programs to implement and avoid during our Day Two Keynote.

Arif Kamal, MD MBA MHS FAAHP FASCO, Chief Patient Officer, American Cancer Society and Associate Professor of Medicine and Population Health, Duke University School of Medicine 

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Policy and Payment Trends Impacting Palliative Care Today and Tomorrow

Quality does not exist in a vacuum and there are other motivations for why we prioritize quality including payment incentives. In this session, our presenter will take us through upcoming policy and payment trends in palliative and hospice medicine and the role of quality in payment. Palliative care delivery and payments models are evolving quickly, as are the policies that affect them. This session provides an overview of key legislative, regulatory and market changes that are impacting palliative care practice today and in the near future.

Phillip Rodgers, MD FAAHPM, Professor, Family Medicine and Internal Medicine and Co-Director, Clinical Palliative Care Program, University of Michigan Medicine

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Equity and Quality: An overview of the importance of DEI in quality palliative care

The pursuit of standardized high-quality palliative care requires us to look at more than just quality outcomes and accessibility of care. It also means we must examine the equitability of care provided to patients to ensure all have access to high-quality care. During this session, our presenter discusses the role of equity, inclusion, and diversity in palliative and serious illness care.

Karen Bullock, PHD LCSW APHSW-C, Endowed Professor of Social Work, Boston College

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Quality Improvement 101

The primary measure in moving towards a culture of quality is understanding your program’s performance through data. However, once you have data, all you have is data until you know how to turn that into action. The next step in achieving quality-based care is to learn the requisite skills needed to improve upon your performance. During this session, our speaker will demonstrate how palliative care teams can use clinical data to identify and structure quality improvement opportunities.

RachelThienprayoon, MD MSCS FAAP FAAHPM, Associate Professor of Anesthesia and Pediatrics, Cincinnati Children's Hospital

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Challenges & Opportunities in Collecting Quality Data

Administering quality-based standards can vary among clinical stakeholders in managing patients across the serious illness spectrum. During this discussion, our panelists share the differences and challenges for interdisciplinary teams and hospice partners in collecting quality data as well as opportunities to grow together.

Panelists
Jori Bogetz, MD, Seattle Children's Hospital and Research Institute 
Kristyn Fazzalaro, MSW LWSC APHSW-C, Manager of Palliative Care and Oncology Support Services, Hoag Health System 
Allison Kestenbaum, MA MPA BCC-PCHAC ACPE,Supervisor of Spiritual Care & Clinical Pastoral Education, UC San Diego Health
Aparna Gupta, DNP FACHE CPHQ, Vice President Quality, National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization

Moderator
Phillip Rodgers, MD FAAHPM, Professor of Family Medicine and Internal Medicine Director, Adult Palliative Care Clinical Services

 

 

 


QMCLogo 500w75hPCQC Virtual Quality Matters Conference 2022
December 8-9, 2022
Agenda

Registered? Access the Event Page Here

 All times are EST

 Thursday, December 8, 2022

12:00pm - 1:15pm 

Why Quality Matters: Where You Sit Determines What You See

Discuss quality from the perspectives of patients, providers and payers in evolving healthcare systems

Tammie QuestMD FAAHPM, Director, Emory Palliative Care Center

1:15pm - 1:55pm

The State of Our Field

An overview of 2020-2021 PCQC structural and operational data of palliative care programs identifying areas of growth and opportunity for our field.

Maggie Rogers, MPH, Director of Research & Analytics, Center to Advance Palliative Care
Fred Friedman, Registry Manager, Palliative Care Quality Collaborative

   
 1:55pm - 2:10pm 

Break

   
 2:10pm - 2:50pm

Managing Opioid Complexity in Individuals with Serious Illness

In this session, we discuss the complexity of opioid prescribing in patients with serious illness. We will review the available evidence on chronic pain, long-term opioid therapy, and opioid misuse/use disorders in the general population. We will then apply the relevant and emerging evidence in palliative care populations to generate best practices that can inform future quality metrics.

Jessica Merlin, MD PhD MBA, Associate Professor, University of Pittsburgh 

Katie Fitzgerald Jones, PhD APN CARN-AP, Postdoctoral Fellow and Nurse Practitioner, Massachusetts General Hospital

2:50pm - 3:30pm 

Learning from PCQC’s Clinical Quality Data

PCQC patient-level outcome data offers a rich source of insights on the care we provide to our patients. In this session we will explore PCQC’s clinical, patient-level outcome data highlighting areas of high performance and discuss how to use this data to improve care.

Steve Pantilat, MD MHM FACP FAAHPM, Kates-Burnard and Hellman Distinguished Professor in Palliative Care and the Chief of the Division of Palliative Medicine, University of California San Francisco

 3:30pm - 4:30pm 

Patient Reported Outcomes – Benefits and Drawbacks

A panel discussion on the use of patient reported outcomes for patient care and how quality measurement is evolving to better leverage PRO data.

Panelists
Katherine Ast, MSW LCSW, Director of Quality & Research, American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine
Ben Hamlin, MPH, Senior Research Informaticist, National Committee for Quality Assurance
Angela M. Stover, PhD, Assistant Professor of Health Policy and Management, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Moderator
Laura Hanson, MD MPH, Professor of Geriatric Medicine and Medical Director, UNC Palliative Care

4:30pm - 5:30pm 

In partnership with NHPCO, a Panel Discussion: Quality Metrics Across the Continuum of Advance Illness & Support Care

Panelists
Kathleen Kerr, Healthcare Consultant and Partner, Transforming Care Partners
Rory Farrand, MS MA MSN, APRN-BC, Vice President, Palliative and Advanced Care, National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization
Joe Rotella, MD MBA HMDC FAAHPM, Chief Medical Officer, American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine

Moderator
Aparna Gupta, DNP FACHE CPHQ, Vice President Quality, National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization

   
   
 

 Friday, December 9, 2022

12:00pm - 1:15pm

Top 10 Pearls in Palliative Care Quality

Aiming to demystify quality improvement, highlighting areas where a systematic approach is needed for success, and offering lessons learned to promote quality within palliative care.

Arif Kamal, MD MBA MHS FAAHP FASCO, Chief Patient Officer, American Cancer Society and Associate Professor of Medicine and Population Health, Duke University School of Medicine 

1:15pm - 1:55pm

 Policy and Payment Trends Impacting Palliative Care Today and Tomorrow

Palliative care delivery and payments models are evolving quickly, as are the policies that affect them. This session will provide an overview of key legislative, regulatory and market changes that are impacting palliative care practice today, and will shape its near future.

Phillip Rodgers, MD FAAHPM, Professor, Family Medicine and Internal Medicine and Co-Director, Clinical Palliative Care Program, University of Michigan Medicine

   
1:55pm - 2:10pm 

Break

   
 2:10pm - 2:50pm

Equity and Quality: An overview of the importance of DEI in quality palliative care

A session on the role of equity, inclusion, and diversity in palliative care.

Karen Bullock, PHD LCSW APHSW-C, Endowed Professor of Social Work, Boston College

2:50pm - 3:30pm 

Quality Improvement 101

A discussion on how palliative care teams can use clinical data to identify and structure quality improvement opportunities

Rachel Thienprayoon, MD MSCS FAAP FAAHPM, Associate Professor of Anesthesia and Pediatrics, Cincinnati Children's Hospital

3:30pm - 4:30pm 

Challenges & Opportunities in Collecting Quality Data

An expert discussion highlighting the importance and challenges of collecting quality data reflecting the breadth of disciplines engaged in palliative care (Pediatrics, Social Work, Chaplaincy, Hospice)

Panelists
Jori Bogetz, MD, Seattle Children's Hospital and Research Institute 
Kristyn Fazzalaro, MSW LWSC APHSW-C, Manager of Palliative Care and Oncology Support Services, Hoag Health System 
Allison Kestenbaum, MA MPA BCC-PCHAC ACPE,Supervisor of Spiritual Care & Clinical Pastoral Education, UC San Diego Health
Aparna Gupta, DNP FACHE CPHQ, Vice President Quality, National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization

Moderator
Phillip Rodgers, MD FAAHPM, Professor of Family Medicine and Internal Medicine Director, Adult Palliative Care Clinical Services

All times are EST


*This agenda, faculty, and schedule is subject to change*

 

 


PCQC Virtual Quality Matters Conference 2022
December 8-9, 2022

Thank you to everyone that made the the Palliative Care Quality Collaborativeinaugural Quality Matters Conference a success including our participants, speakers, and sponsors! During this event, we were able to promote best practices and training for providing the highest quality palliative care to patients with serious illness and their loved ones.

Quality Matters Conference 2022 was a two-day virtual event that will bring together thought leaders within palliative care to share best practices, opportunities, and innovations that support high-quality care. The Quality Matters Conference welcomed all members of the palliative care field regardless of experience in quality, offering actionable insight to promote a culture of quality within their palliative care programs. We are delighted to be able to provide up to 8 hours of continuing education credits through this activity. For more information, pelase read the Continuing Education Details page. 

Agenda

Sponsors

 

 

 

 QMCLogo 500w75h

 

Sponsorship opportunities are available for this virtual conference. Please contact the PCQC Team to learn more.

 

 


QMCLogo 500w75hPCQC Virtual Quality Matters Conference 2023
December 14-15, 2023
Participant Access

 

Continuing Education Details

Access Live Learner Notification

Access Enduring Learner Notification

Day 1 - Quality Matters Conference on December 14, 2023 - Full Recording 

Day 2 - Quality Matters Conference on December 14, 2023 - Full Recording 

Day 1 - Quality Matters Conference 2023 Slide Handout
Day 2 - Quality Matters Conference 2023 Slide Handout 

 

Log in to Eventbrite

All times are EST
*This agenda, faculty, and schedule are subject to change*

 

Thursday, December 14, 2023

12:00pm - 1:10pm

Welcome and Keynote: Quality: What is it Good For?

The foundational principles of palliative care are to relieve suffering and improve quality of life for people living with serious illness and for their loved ones. How do we know if we are actually achieving these goals? This session will focus on the why of quality measurement and its role in ensuring the highest quality of care for our patients and their loved ones.

Diane E. Meier, MD, Director Emeritus and Strategic Advisor, Center to Advance Palliative Care and Professor, Department of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine, Icahan School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

1:10pm - 2:10pm

Educational Session 1: Panel on Perspectives of Health Equity

The PCQC is dedicated to improving palliative care through the collection, analysis, and timely reporting of actionable data. Its objective is to improve healthcare by defining and promoting quality in palliative care. Quality care is equitable care. In addition, ensuring high-quality palliative care services and measuring program impact to demonstrate value, attention to inequalities is required.

This session addresses health equity as a driver for quality care. The panelist of subject matter experts will discuss health disparities across various racial, ethnic and cultural groups and patient populations, identify areas for improvement in serious illness care and make recommendations for (or promote) best practices for high quality palliative care for historically marginalized managing serious illness.

Karen Bullock PhD, LICSW, FGSA, APHSW-C, Louise McMahon Ahearn Endowed Professor in the Boston College School of Social Work and in Global Public Health

Carey Candrian, PhD, Associate Professor, Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Colorado

Khaliah Johnson, MD, Division Chief, Pediatric Palliative Care; Associate Professor, Department of Pediatrics, Emory University School of Medicine; and Attending Physician, Grady Ponce de Leon Center

 

2:25pm - 3:15pm

Educational Session 2: Palliative Care for Parkinson’s Disease

In this session we will review the evidence that people living with Parkinson’s and their families have significant palliative care needs that are often not met under current standards of care. We will review evidence supporting palliative approaches to improve patient and family-centered outcomes and areas where additional collaborations with neurology or neuro-specific approaches may help palliative care teams. Lastly, we will discuss efforts to challenge systems and change culture to improve care.

Benzi Kluger, MD, Professor of Neurology and Medicine and the Director Palliative Care Research Center at the University of Rochester Medical Center

3:20pm - 4:10pm

Educational Session 3: The State of the Our Field

In this overview of the structural and operational data of palliative care programs collected during the 2022 PCQC Annual Program Survey, we will review how palliative care programs operate across the country. We will also review staffing models of palliative care teams and identify how the PCQC Registry can be utilized to identify areas of growth and opportunity for the field.

Fred Friedman, Registry Manager, Palliative Care Quality Collaborative
Steve Pantilat, MD, MHM, FACP, FAAHPM, Kates-Burnard and Hellman Distinguished Professor in Palliative Care and the Chief of the Division of Palliative Medicine, University of California San Francisco

4:10pm - 5:00pm

Educational Session 4: Palliative Care Outcomes Collaborative

The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaborative (PCOC) is a national voluntary program that is improving the quality and outcomes of palliative care in Australia. During this session, PCQC welcomes PCOC to share best practices of high-quality palliative care learned within their Australian-based collaborative. Participants will learn about the PCOC suite of measures and reports to inform quality improvement benchmarking as well as be able to describe how the PCOC model can help improve equity in palliative care outcomes.

Barbara Daveson, PhD, Associate Professor, Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC), Faculty of Science, Medicine and Health, University of Wollongong, Australia

 

Friday, December 15, 2023

12:00pm - 1:15pm

Welcome and Showcase Panel: State-of-the-Art Methods for Electronic Clinical Quality Measures for Palliative Care

With the increasing use of electronic health records over the past decade, electronic clinical quality measures (eCQMs) are increasingly used in quality measurement and accountability programs to promote high quality care. Many key palliative care quality measures that use the electronic health record (EHR) evaluate complex topics such as goals of care conversations or symptom management. Until recently, utilizing text-based data required to evaluate these complex topics necessitated manual chart abstraction, which is extremely cumbersome, expensive, and not scalable to the population level. We will discuss approaches to identifying the population of interest to study, otherwise known as the denominator or an electronic health record (EHR) phenotype. We will also discuss how Natural language processing (NLP) presents an opportunity to identify text-based data within EHRs with increased speed and efficiency compared to manual chart review. In this session, we aim to review state-of-the art scalable methodologic approaches to implementing eCQMs within health systems to promote novel research and quality improvement efforts and support a learning health system.

Prasanna Ananth, MD, MPH, Associate Professor of Pediatrics, Yale School of Medicine; and Faculty Member, Yale Cancer Outcomes, Public Policy and Effectiveness Research Center
Charlotta Lindvall, MD, PhD, Director of Clinical Informatics, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute; Principal Investigator, Computational Palliative Care Research Lab, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute; and Assistant Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School
Anne Walling, MD, PhD, FAAHPM, Associate Professor of Medicine in the Division of General Internal Medicine and Health Services Research at University of California, Los Angeles

Moderator
Angelo Volandes, MD, MPH, Associate Professor, Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, and Co-Founder, ACP Decisions Nonprofit Foundation 

1:25pm - 2:15pm

Educational Session 5: PCQC Clinical Data Review: Learning from PCQC’s Clinical Quality Data

During this session, we will provide you with an overview of telehealth in outpatient palliative care. Participants will be guided through a comprehensive review of PCQC’s clinical quality data, shedding light on the landscape and significance of telehealth while addressing disparities in access and utilization. We will review how we have gained valuable insights into how PCQC clinical quality data can be harnessed to examine clinical outcomes and disparities associated with telehealth.

Sarah Nouri, MD, MPH, Assistant Professor and Associate Chief for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, Division of Palliative Medicine, University of California San Francisco

2:30pm - 3:20pm

Educational Session 6: Clinician Wellness and Palliative Care

Join us for an insightful session where we delve into the critical intersection of healthcare, palliative care, and the well-being of those who provide these essential services. This session will equip participants with a comprehensive understanding of workplace wellness and the unique challenges faced by clinicians in palliative care. Through a focus on national models, we will explore practical strategies for addressing burnout and fostering organizational compassion for palliative care clinicians.

Rachel Thienprayoon, MD, MSCS, Chief Clinical Wellness Officer and an Associate Professor of Anesthesia and Pediatrics, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital

3:25pm - 4:15pm

Educational Session 7: Quality and Research: Better Together

Understanding the evolving landscape is paramount for palliative care professionals. During this session, participants will learn to describe the need for quality and research in palliative care. Additionally, we’ll explore the intersection of quality and research in clinical care and discovery. Participants will be engaged in a discussion that explores the opportunities to leverage quality efforts and optimize collaboration moving forward between the PCQC Registry, the Collaborative, and research networks in order to conduct evidence-based care.

Christine Seel Ritchie, MD, MSPH, Kenneth L. Minaker, MD Endowed Chair in Geriatric Medicine; Research Director, Division of Palliative Care and Geriatric Medicine; Director, Center for Aging and Serious Illness, Mongan Institute at Massachusetts General Hospital; and Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School


*This agenda, faculty, and schedule is subject to change*

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