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You are here: Home / cat / Small but Mighty: 5 Lessons from Small Teams Delivering High-Quality Palliative Care

Small but Mighty: 5 Lessons from Small Teams Delivering High-Quality Palliative Care

Dated: December 17, 2025

High-quality palliative care is not determined by the size of a program or the scale of its budget, but by consistency, collaboration, and a shared commitment to patients and families. Across the United States, smaller palliative care programs are demonstrating how focused teamwork, intentional training, and clear priorities can deliver meaningful, high-quality care even with limited resources. Their work shows that impact is driven by how care is organized and delivered, rather than by organizational scale.

In the summer of 2025, CAPC engaged with twenty small palliative care organizations, including community hospitals, critical access hospitals, independent hospices, and small practice groups serving fewer than 150 beds. These conversations revealed that successful small programs rely on clear structures, deliberate learning approaches, and strong accountability to the communities they serve. Despite staffing and resource constraints, these teams maintain high standards by aligning around shared goals and practical systems that support daily care delivery.

A recurring theme across these programs was the importance of consistency. With small teams and overlapping roles, standardized onboarding and education help ensure that all staff share a common foundation in communication, symptom management, and serious illness care. Clear expectations and shared competencies reduce variation in care and build confidence among both clinicians and patients.

Another key insight was the effectiveness of micro-learning. Rather than relying on lengthy training sessions, smaller programs reinforce skills through brief, regular learning moments such as short updates, reference materials, and practical case examples. These approaches fit better into busy clinical environments and help keep knowledge current without overwhelming staff.

Peer connection also plays a vital role in sustaining quality. Small teams frequently turn to professional networks to address challenges related to clinical practice, operations, or policy changes. Access to trusted peers and curated updates allows them to quickly adapt best practices without needing dedicated policy or administrative teams.

Demonstrating value is essential for sustainability in smaller organizations. Program leaders consistently emphasized the need to show return on investment by tracking outcomes such as staff training completion, confidence levels, patient experience, and operational efficiencies. Simple, data-driven narratives help leadership understand the importance of maintaining and protecting palliative care services.

These lessons matter because smaller organizations often serve as engines of innovation. Without large external funding, they develop practical, low-cost solutions that are closely aligned with patient and community needs. Their experiences underscore that high-quality palliative care can be achieved through focus, creativity, and disciplined use of available tools.

Overall, the experiences of these small programs reinforce a clear message: sustainable, high-quality palliative care depends on structure, shared learning, and teamwork rather than scale. By prioritizing consistent education, peer collaboration, and accountability, smaller teams are shaping a resilient and patient-centered future for palliative care.

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