Locations:
Search IconSearch
December 15, 2023/Neurosciences/Podcast

Palliative Care for Parkinson’s Disease (Podcast)

When and how a multidisciplinary palliative care clinic can fill unmet needs for this population

While Parkinson’s disease is characterized by movement symptoms, it also causes a range of nonmotor complications, including pain, cognitive changes and psychosocial issues. In 2020, Cleveland Clinic began offering a Parkinson’s disease palliative care clinic, named the Care-PD Clinic, to help patients and their caregivers address the most distressing symptoms of the disease and maximize quality of life.

Advertisement

Cleveland Clinic is a non-profit academic medical center. Advertising on our site helps support our mission. We do not endorse non-Cleveland Clinic products or services. Policy

“As most patients get toward the intermediate and advanced stages of Parkinson’s disease, it’s the symptoms unrelated to movement that tend to have the biggest effect on quality of life,” says movement disorders neurologist Adam Margolius, MD, who sees patients in the Care-PD Clinic along with a palliative care specialist and a social worker. “Typically these are symptoms like confusion, cognitive impairment, constipation, fatigue, anxiety, depression, sleep problems and others.”

In the most recent episode of Cleveland Clinic’s Neuro Pathways podcast, Dr. Margolius shares insight on providing palliative care for people with Parkinson’s disease when quality-of-life issues loom especially large. He covers:

  • The role of palliative care and why it’s beneficial in this population
  • The difference between palliative care and hospice care
  • The Care-PD Clinic’s model of care for initial and follow-up visits
  • Signs that a patient with Parkinson’s disease should be referred to a palliative care clinic
  • The importance of supporting caregivers of people with Parkinson’s disease

Click the podcast player above to listen to the 18-minute episode now, or read on for a short edited excerpt. Check out more Neuro Pathways episodes at clevelandclinic.org/neuropodcast or wherever you get your podcasts. This activity has been approved for AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ and ANCC contact hours. After listening to the podcast, you can claim your credit here.

Excerpt from the podcast

Podcast host Glen Stevens, DO, PhD: What are the signs that a person with Parkinson’s disease might particularly benefit from referral to a palliative care clinic?

Advertisement

Dr. Margolius: Although a palliative care clinic is a bit of a limited resource, we don’t want to constrict providers at all from referring if they think the clinic would be helpful for a given patient and their caregiver. More specifically, however, there are three situations when I think patients with Parkinson’s stand to gain the most benefit from a clinic like this.

One is when patients are overly troubled by nonmotor symptoms of Parkinson’s disease and traditional therapies are not working as well as we’d like, especially if pain is a consideration. That is something that our Care-PD Clinic can address to a deeper extent than can typically be done during a movement disorder visit.

A second instance is if there is significant caregiver burden or strain. Often the caregiver role can grow and grow, and that can lead to decreased quality of life for the caregiver, which often directly affects the patient too. If there’s a lot of caregiver strain present, that’s something we can help with.

The third situation is if there are questions about the future ― planning for the future or about death or dying. Those are issues that we can help out with as well.

Advertisement

Related Articles

photo of a man sleeping at a desk, with a podcast icon overlay
March 15, 2024/Neurosciences/Podcast
Diagnosis and Management of Idiopathic Hypersomnia (Podcast)

Testing options and therapies are expanding for this poorly understood sleep disorder

series of digital-looking brain icons with a podcast button overlay on top
March 1, 2024/Neurosciences/Podcast
Harnessing the Power of AI in Medicine (Podcast)

Neurology is especially well positioned for opportunities to enhance clinical care and medical training

23-NEU-4424571-CQD-Hero-650×450
February 19, 2024/Neurosciences/Podcast
Central Sensitization Syndromes in Pediatric Patients (Podcast)

How functional restoration can help children with these conditions marked by unexplained pain with stigmatized symptoms

23-NEU-4424570-CQD-Hero-650×450-Podcast
February 5, 2024/Neurosciences/Podcast
Diagnosis and Management of Neuromyelitis Optica Spectrum Disorder (Podcast)

Despite advancements, care for this rare autoimmune disease is too complex to go it alone

23-NEU-4424569-CQD-Hero-650×450-Podcast-1179957802
January 16, 2024/Neurosciences/Podcast
Managing Neurological Disorders in Pregnancy (Podcast)

A discussion of special care considerations before, during and after pregnancy

23-NEU-4424568-CQD-Hero-650×450-Podcast
January 2, 2024/Neurosciences/Podcast
Harnessing the Power of Neuroengineering and AI to Improve Epilepsy Surgery (Podcast)

Data-driven methods may improve seizure localization and refine surgical decision-making

23-NEU-4300122-mitochondria-podcast-650×450
December 5, 2023/Neurosciences/Podcast
Diagnosis and Management of Mitochondrial Diseases (Podcast)

Guidance on what should prompt a workup, current and emerging treatment options, and more

23-NEU-4292812-CQD-Hero-Podcast-650×450
November 2, 2023/Neurosciences/Podcast
Neuropsychiatric Challenges Facing Patients With Huntington’s Disease (Podcast)

Behavioral and cognitive symptoms often present early and may go unnoticed

Ad