Support Programs

Pain and Symptom Management

Supportive/Palliative Care

Palliative Care and Pain Program Offering Specialized Care
for Advanced Illness

About the Palliative Care and Pain Program
at Monmouth Medical Center

Palliative care is specialized care that focuses on treating the pain, symptoms and stress that can accompany chronic and terminal illness. The goal is not to cure, but to provide comfort and maintain the highest possible quality of life for as long as life remains. It is designed to support any other treatment patients receive by helping them live comfortably throughout their illness, as well as emotional, social and spiritual services.

Palliative care programs focus on the relief of pain and suffering for people facing chronic or life-limiting illness, and through the Palliative Care and Pain Program, Monmouth Medical Center is committed to providing the best possible care to these patients.

The Palliative Care and Pain Program at Monmouth Medical Center focuses on providing medical, emotional and spiritual care to patients with cancer and other serious illnesses and their families — both in the inpatient and outpatient setting.

The program is under the direction of fellowship-trained geriatrician Jessica L. Israel, M.D., who specializes in palliative care medicine and serves as chief of Palliative Care and Pain. She plays an integral leadership role in the ongoing development of the Palliative Care and Pain Program, whose goal is to help people faced with chronic and advanced illnesses decide how to approach this stage in their lives. It places a major emphasis on symptom management, including relief from pain, anxiety, depression or any other distresses at this most difficult time.

Providing Optimal Comfort and Function
The mission of the Palliative Care and Pain Program is to assure that each patient’s symptoms are managed as well as possible, providing optimal comfort and function. To achieve this, program staff works as a team with other health care professionals to provide pain relief through traditional and non-traditional approaches.

Our team consists of a specialized physician and nurse practitioner who work with you to manage symptoms such as pain, delirium, fatigue, insomnia, depression and anxiety due to illness. Depending on the patient’s needs, the program provides symptom control, pain management, emotional and spiritual support, psychological and social help, bereavement counseling and end-of-life planning for patients and their family members.

About Our Clinical Services
The Palliative Care and Pain Program at Monmouth Medical Center offers a host of clinical services, both in the inpatient and outpatient setting, including:

Inpatient Consultation: Any hospital patient can receive a pain and palliative care consultation and follow-up care. This service can be initiated by nursing, case management, social work, patient/family request or attending physician.

Outpatient Visits: Patients can be referred from their community physicians or self-referred or are followed in the outpatient clinic after hospital discharge, with arrangements made by the palliative care team.

Home Visits: Patients unable to come to the hospital for follow-up, whom are not under the care of a hospice service, may receive a home visit. For patients who transition to hospice, the Palliative Care Program staff continues to follow them in their homes with their hospice team.

Patients or their family members can make a request to consult with the palliative care team, and a team member will visit within 24 hours of a request. After the consultation, the program staff will work with the patient’s primary doctor to make suggestions for care. The palliative care team visit referred patients daily until they are discharged from the hospital.

To schedule a consultation or to learn more about the Pain and Palliative Care Program, call 732-923-7962.

Frequently Asked Questions

When is palliative care needed?
Palliative care can help a patient at any stage of a potential life-limiting illness. It is best introduced early in the plan of care, but can be received at any time. Patients may need care if suffering from symptoms that are hard to treat, such as pain, or if they need help understanding treatment choices or support making difficult medical decisions.

Is palliative care and hospice the same thing?
No, palliative care is offered at any stage of an advanced or life-limiting illness, while hospice care is appropriate for people with terminal illness during the last stages of life.

Must other treatment be stopped in order to receive palliative care?
No, palliative care is designed to help support patients that are already receiving treatment for their illness.

Is palliative care covered by insurance?
Palliative care is covered by most insurance plans.

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