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In this episode, Hospice News Editor Jim Parker speaks with Dr. Timothy Ihrig, CEO of Ihrig M.D. and Associates, on value-based care in the hospice space, palliative care in a pandemic, regulatory reform and other key issues in the industry.
In today's episode of Help Choose Home, we're joined by Dr. Timothy Ihrig, the Chief Medical Officer of Crossroads Hospice and Palliative Care. He's also the founder and Chief Executive Officer of Ihrig MD and Associates. He is an internationally recognized expert in hospice and palliative care and a second time guest of the podcast. In this episode we discuss: How to know when curative medical treatments are actually causing harm to an elderly patient How the financial imperatives of the medical industry lead to unnecessary invasive treatments Why becoming comfortable with death is the secret to living a full life
What ist the question that medicine needs to answer for itself in the next few years? Why do we need to rethink the way healthcare is applied? Imagine somebody you love and adore is terminally ill, now imagine that medicine does things that person and not for the person! How would you feel? Tim and I tried to get to the bitter truth of dying and topics connected to death in the reals of healthcare. We touch on the topic of physician's responsibility, where Tim explains the necessity for truth over fear. He explains that changing the narrative from dying to "last period of living" empowers the patient to set a priority on "what is sacred to them". We discuss the assisted suicide and the choice of pain management in general. Overall the honest and direct communication with the patient and his family seems to be absolutely crucial. Tim offers statistical evidence for the efficiency of true care and helps us understand how economically futile the obsessive "let's try and fix it" ideology can be. Take a moment and listen to the talk, to Tim's anecdotes from his long years in the palliative care and actively unravel his thoughts for yourself. Guest: Timothy Ihrig, CMO Crossroads Hospice and Palliative care USA Host: Michal Hulik, Psychologist
Read the blog here. Welcome to the Executive Innovation Show Podcast, brought to you by One Touch Telehealth. During this podcast, host Carrie Chitsey talks with Dr. Tim Ihrig and Kim Kuebler. Timothy Ihrig, M.D., M.A. is Chief Medical Officer at Crossroads Hospice and Palliative Care. He is the founder and CEO of Ihrig MD & Associates. Dr. Kim Kuebler is the Founder and Director of the Multiple Chronic Conditions Resource Center, highlighted by the U.S. Dept of Health and Human Services for providing interdisciplinary resources to improve care for the largest and fastest-growing U.S. patient populations. Listen to this episode of The Executive Innovation Show Podcast as we discuss: Today we talk with two doctors who are on the front lines of palliative and hospice care, Dr. Tim Ihrig and Dr. Kim Kuebler. With more seniors looking to age at home, how has this changed the industry? Listen to this in-depth conversation about the future of palliative care and how virtual care is making a huge impact. Should we be thinking about the end of life palliative and hospice care as separate or the same? What’s the difference? Listen as Dr. Tim Ihrig of Crossroads Hospice and Palliative Care details his sentiments on “stealing hope” from patients. Are we selling false dreams to patients? How can doctors do a better job of helping a patient receive a higher quality of life other than aggressive treatments that will hinder their ability to live? What question should doctors be asking to make sure that the patient has a good quality of life? Dr. Ihrig states that “We should stop focusing so much on that endpoint and shift it and say, how do you want to live?". He expresses that we should be moving away from healthcare reform and talk about how we can reform care. Dr. Ihrig believes that it starts with honest conversations, empowering people to ask questions, shifting the narrative. Dr. Kim Kuebler has worked both on the chronic disease and pain management sides of healthcare. How does pain management fit in with palliative care? She breaks down some insightful statistics about chronic pain management across the country today.What is the difference between palliative care and hospice care? Should palliative care start when the patient has been diagnosed with a chronic disease?Can technology help transform pain management programs in the future? How can primary care physicians implement remote monitoring plans with technology like telehealth that helps decrease overall health care costs and improve patient care?As more patients get access to their health information, how is the conversation changing with their doctors?As always, we ask these healthcare executives what is keeping them up at night. Listen to their answers here. Keep up with Dr. Tim Ihrig by connecting on LinkedIn. Get more resources on pain management from Dr. Kim Klueber and Multiple Chronic Conditions Resource Center. Learn more about One Touch Telehealth and how telehealth can help providers improve access to care for patients with chronic conditions. Download our “What Is Telehealth?" White Paper to learn more. Support the show (http://www.helpinghumans.care)
Timothy Ihrig of Crossroads Hospice and Palliative Care on advanced directives. MK Backstrom, author of “Mom Babble: The Messy Truth About Motherhood,” on mommy blogging during COVID-19. Ann Eisenberg of Univ of South Carolina on Batson challenge. Sonya Shah, California Institute of Integral Studies, on restorative justice. Jay Olson of McGill Univ on psychedelic placebos. Eli Lebowitz, Yale Univ, on parent anxiety.
Many physicians face a conundrum. While their extensive years of schooling and training emphasize providing care, treatments, and intervention in order to maintain life, the truth is, death is inevitable and a reality we all must face. According to Dr. Timothy Ihrig, a palliative care specialist and chief medical officer at Crossroads Hospice, because the medical field is constructed around the idea of intervening at all costs, patients and families are often put into a position of prolonging death verses preserving life. Committed to patient-centered care, he believes palliative care has the potential to transcend and transform the healthcare system. He is a long standing advocate for treating patients with life-limiting illnesses according to their individual priorities and life goals, and encourages a reframing of the conversation around the ways in which we think about and discuss death and end of life. For him, it’s not about dying, but about living.
Nicole and Cooper continue their conversation with thought-leader Dr. Timothy Ihrig about palliative care.
Nicole and Cooper have an in-depth conversation with thought-leader Dr. Timothy Ihrig about palliative care.
The healthcare industry in America is so focused on pathology, surgery and pharmacology -- on what doctors "do" to patients -- that it often overlooks the values of the human beings it's supposed to care for. Palliative care physician Timothy Ihrig explains the benefits of a different approach, one that fosters a patient's overall quality of life and navigates serious illness from diagnosis to death with dignity and compassion.
미국의 보건 의료 사업은 병리학, 수술, 그리고 약학 - 의사가 환자에게 "하는 것"에만 너무 초점을 두고 있습니다. 이는 보살핌을 받아야 마땅할 인간의 가치를 종종 간과합니다. 완화치료 의사 티모시 이릭은 다른 접근법의 혜택을 설명합니다. 이 접근법은 환자의 전반적인 삶의 질을 발전시키고, 진단에서 죽음에 이르기까지 위엄과 연민을 가지고 심각한 병을 다루는 것입니다.
A indústria da saúde nos EUA está tão focada em patologias, cirurgias e farmacologia – no que médicos "fazem" aos pacientes – que muitas vezes negligencia os valores humanos com os quais deveria se importar. O médico de cuidados paliativos Timothy Ihrig explica os benefícios de uma abordagem diferente, uma que favoreça a qualidade de vida do paciente e lide com enfermidades graves, do diagnóstico até a morte, com dignidade e compaixão.
L'industrie de la santé aux États-Unis est tellement concentrée sur les pathologies, la chirurgie, la pharmacologie - sur ce que les docteurs « font » aux patients - qu'elle dépasse les valeurs humaines dont elle est censée s'occuper. Le médecin en soins palliatifs Timothy Ihrig explique les bénéfices d'une approche différente, qui encourage la qualité de vie des patients et les fait cheminer depuis le diagnostic jusqu'à une mort dans la dignité et la compassion.
La industria de la salud en EE.UU. está tan centrada en la patología, la cirugía y la farmacología -- en lo que los médicos "hacen" a los pacientes -- que a menudo pasa por alto los valores del ser humano que se supone que cuida. El médico de cuidados paliativos Timothy Ihrig explica las ventajas de un enfoque diferente que fomenta la calidad de vida general del paciente y acompaña una enfermedad grave desde el diagnóstico hasta la muerte, con dignidad y compasión.