CHA is offering an on-demand
recording of the April 16, 2026, Palliative Care Educational Webinar Series — Session Three: Understanding What Matters to Patients and Families webinar.
Please
Note: You
must have a CHA web account to access the on-demand
recording.
Description:
The Catholic Health Association (CHA) and the Center to Advance Palliative Care (CAPC) are pleased to announce a new webinar series on palliative care education, exclusively for CHA members.
Developed to help CHA members strengthen palliative care program quality and sustainability, this three-part series aims to support palliative care leaders by providing high-level training in the following areas:
- Promoting the well-being of palliative care professionals
- Ensuring the financial sustainability of palliative care programs
- Strengthening age-friendly care by equipping clinicians to focus on What Matters most to patients and families
Open to all CHA members, each one-hour webinar will be led by CAPC faculty and includes time for questions. Additional resources, including training, tools, and additional expert consulting are available to CAPC members.
Session Three: Leadership Strategies to Promote the Well-Being of Palliative Care Professionals
Who should attend: Leadership, practitioners, social workers, RNs, chaplains.
“In this world, nothing is certain except death and taxes,” wrote Benjamin Franklin. In honor of this timeless truth, National Healthcare Decisions Day (NHDD) is observed each year on April 16—the day after Tax Day—to encourage patients and families to think about What Matters to them and plan for their future health care preferences.
During this webinar, Mark Kantrow, MD, System Medical Director of Palliative Care at Franciscan Missionaries of Our Lady Health System, discusses the importance of communication strategies for understanding What Matters to patients and families, with an emphasis on honoring each person’s dignity and preferences. Allison Silvers, MBA, Chief Health Care Transformation Officer at the Center to Advance Palliative Care (CAPC), then introduces CAPC’s communication skills training and Age-Friendly Health Care learning pathway , both designed to build the core competencies needed for person-centered care in aging populations. Lastly, Lea Ames, MBA, Director of Intake and Access (Interim Director Palliative Care), Post-Acute, SSM Health at Home, WI, describes how her organization incorporated CAPC training into its palliative care program design.
Suggested CAPC Resources:
Presenter
Mark Kantrow, MD
System Medical Director of Palliative Care
Franciscan Missionaries of Our Lady Health System
Allison Silvers, MBA
Chief Health Care Transformation Officer
CAPC
Indu Spugnardi
Senior Director, Community Health and Eldercare
Catholic Health Association of the United States
Gregg VandeKieft, MD, MA
Palliative Care Physician, Clinical Ethicist
Providence St. Peter Hospital
This program is
non-refundable.