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DOING WELL BY DOING GOOD: HOW REFORM OF END OF LIFE CARE CAN IMPROVE ACCESS FOR ALL AMERICANS
Linked to groups: Healthcare Advisors' Blog
James Tulsky, MD
Center for Palliative Care, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC
In a recent New York Times Magazine interview, President Obama reflected on the last days of his grandmother’s life and the difficult choices he and his family faced. She was dying from cancer, suffered a small stroke, fell and broke her hip. They chose to replace her hip, but two weeks later she developed complications and died soon thereafter. After stating that if faced with the same decision he would do it again, Obama went on to comment, "Whether, sort of in the aggregate, society making those decisions to give my grandmother, or everybody else's aging grandparents or parents, a hip replacement when they’re terminally ill is a sustainable model is a very difficult question." Yet, he continued "If somebody told me that my grandmother couldn’t have a hip replacement and she had to lie there in misery in the waning days of her life, that would be pretty upsetting."
Conservative critics and other opponents of comprehensive health care reform seized on these statements to warn that Obama was foreshadowing rationing, and presented this situation as a choice between the status quo and withholding care from the sick and vulnerable. However, this choice is false and we are seriously short-changed if we allow the discussion to proceed at this level. The President's story of his grandmother is, in fact, central to the question of health care reform. But, lost in the high decibel debate is the possibility of a third way.
To provide access to high quality care for all Americans our country must decrease overall health care spending. Currently, a disproportionate amount of costs are incurred at the very end of life and, more importantly, often go toward care that is neither effective nor desired. In 2006, 30% of Medicare expenditures were used by the 5% of beneficiaries who died that year. About one-third of these expenditures in the last year of life were spent in the last month. And, most of this was for invasive life-sustaining care such as mechanical ventilation. To put it another way, acute care in the final 30 days of life (which by definition is generally ineffective) accounts for 78% of costs incurred in the final year of life.
What does all of this mean? We cannot expect to get costs under control without thinking seriously about reforming the way we spend money on people who will soon die. However, raising this topic appears to be a political third rail in the health care debate. It is not an accident that there was barely a mention of end of life care in the recent Senate Finance Committee document on "Expanding Health Care Coverage: Proposals to Provide Affordable Coverage to All Americans." When the issue is brought up, it is often accompanied by accusations of rationing, withholding care and sensationalized stories about the elderly being denied dialysis in countries with “socialized medicine.” However, reforming care in a way that increases access to palliative care and hospice actually offers us the opportunity to improve the experience of dying patients and their families while reducing health care expenditures. The goal is quality; the benefit is cost savings. In health care, this is the ultimate example of "doing well by doing good."
Hospital palliative care programs have been shown to both improve quality and reduce costs of care for America's sickest and most complex patients. They do this not be reducing desired care, but by addressing symptoms, helping patients and families establish appropriate care goals and then coordinating care that meets those goals. Most people don't want to die in a hospital tethered to machines. Palliative care helps them ensure this won’t happen while saving the system millions, and potentially billions, of dollars. These savings come in fewer hospital admissions and elimination of non-beneficial imaging, laboratory tests, drugs and procedures. Those who remain skeptical ought to be convinced by studies of the geographic variations in the use of medical resources in the last years of life, which demonstrate that greater intensity of care does not necessarily generate improved outcomes.
Many in the health care community increasingly understand the role that rethinking how we handle our last days can play in achieving other reform goals. For example, the National Quality Forum and the National Priorities Partnership have identified "Palliative and End-of-Life Care" as one of six national priorities in health care reform.
What would such a change in priorities look like? For starters, payment incentives could be redesigned to expand access to hospice and palliative medicine. End of life care quality metrics could be included in financing plans. Inducements could be created to ensure more providers receive training in end-of-life care. And, implementation of focused comparative effectiveness research on treatments used near the end of life would highlight the exact value of, for example, chemotherapy for very end stage cancer.
To achieve any of these goals, end of life care must first become part of our national health care reform discussion. I applaud the President for recognizing the pivotal role this issue plays in the debate and for showing the courage to discuss it. We must ensure that the conversation moves beyond polarized positions and includes the full range of options offered by comprehensive and compassionate palliative care.
James brings up a very important topic in our hope and work toward providing the highest quality of health care for all Americans. Unfortunately end-of-life care is too often misunderstood as being limited to rationing of medical services rather than providing compassion and comfort at the end of our lives. As a physician, frequently I see relatives who appear in the ICU in the last days or weeks of their loved one's life and "want everything done". "Advanced directives" are now requested of all patients entering the hospital to better guide their care and wishes should they become incapacitated. The open discussion of end-of-life in our spectrum of health care is vital to ensure that reason guides our incredible technology and not the other way around. The George Mark House is the first pediatric hospice in the nation and located in Oakland, California. It is entirely funded by donations and staffed by volunteers who accept patient's and their families regardless of their ability to pay. The fact that this is only facility of this type in the country speaks loudly that much more work is needed in this area. We must look at the entire circle of life with the goal of providing appropriate medical care throughout.
I worked in hospice, in home. There needs to be enormously more attention to providing this care, especially in pain relief. There are much better ways of dying than those easily available at the present time.
This coming July I will loose the health insurance that I have had for the past ten years that has provided me my HIV meds, testing and other health care costs. Even though I could afford continuation of health insurance none is available to me at any cost because of my HIV/AIDS.
So I will become totally dependent on medicare for my health care needs. Because my disability income is higher then 200% of the poverty level I am inelgible for all Ryan White HIV and State assistance programs.
I calculate that my out of pocket costs will rise on average to approximately $15,000 - $20,000 per year...which I cannot afford on my disability income. To this end, come July I will stop taking my HIV medications because I must use what resources I have for the illnesses that come on regular basis when one lives with HIV/AIDS.
My viral load is currently undetectable and this probably means I can go a couple years without taking HIV meds before it becomes a life threatening issue.
I have a friend who stopped taking his HIV meds two months ago. Although he is employeed and has health insurance his co-payment for his meds approaches $300/month. He too falls just above the 200% of poverty line, however, because his hours have been reduced due to the faltering economy he has been unable to pay his cost for HIV meds. Unlike me his viral load is dangerously high. I expect within 12 months he will be in a life threatening situation.
HELP US Dr. Dean!
Great Post. I too support President Obama's plan to reform health care.
This plan reduces costs. There is much evidence that health insurance costs are much too high. Between 1999 and 2008 the average cost of employer-based health insurance rose from $128 a month to $280 a month. It is simply not healthy for premiums to rise 117% like it has since 1999. What frightens me is that if we do not change our system and keep going at the pace that we are at, I may have to pay $130 a month for single payer health insurance and up to $600 a month for family health insurance by the time I am 23. I don’t want to have to look my children in the eye and say that if they get sick, I cannot pay for coverage. In addition, my first job will most likely not be able to afford to provide its employees with health insurance due to the rising costs.
Every American will have access to affordable, quality health care. Everyone has the right to health insurance. Everyone deserves the chance to have a healthy life and raise healthy families. President Obama’s health care policies are exactly what America needs right now.
Thank you,
Douglas Marino
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- And patients want it too!
By LindaB on May 18, 2009 11:18 AM EDTMy 93 year old mother is on hospice care. She may not die within 6 months, but she does have a large aneurysm on her aorta, and she does not want to die in the emergency room. There is nothing that they can do for her, so rather than lie in an ER all day and then be sent home, it was her request that we do something to keep her assisted living facility from sending her to the ER every time she gets shortness of breath or pain in her chest. But they are obligated to do that by state law. The only way she could avoid those trips to the ER, and there have been several, is to be on hospice. What a blessing it has become for her! She has a visiting nurse who comes to see her every week, someone who comes and helps bathe her, a chaplain if she wants her, and social workers who come and cheer her up.
If you ask an elderly person what THEY want, most of them say they want to die at home and they don't want to die with a lot of tubes sticking out of them. Dr Tulsky's program is a lifesaver for families and patients who want to be respected and comforted in their last days. That it saves money is almost a byline. The important thing that palliative care and hospice care does is that it gives the patient and their families more control over their care and the main focus is to keep people comfortable and as pain free as possible.