Many Medicare patients with advanced cancer receive potentially aggressive treatment at the expense of supportive care, according to a study that analyzed Medicare records.
The study, published in JAMA Health Forum,
examined the quality of end-of-life care among 33,744 Medicare
decedents. The study involved patients of diverse ethnic backgrounds age
66 or older who died from breast, prostate, pancreatic or lung cancers.
Overall,
claims records showed that 45% of the patients experienced potentially
aggressive care (such as multiple acute care visits within days of
death), while there was a low receipt of supportive care, such as
palliative, hospice and advanced care planning in the last six months
of life. While hospice care spiked to more than 70% during the month
that death occurred, over 16% of patients spent less than 3 days in
hospices. Moreover, receipt of advanced care planning and palliative
care remained below 25%.
“Care
at end-of-life continues to favor over-treatment despite considerable
efforts to raise awareness about the harms of aggressive treatment in
the last decade,” said Youngmin Kwon, PhD, a research fellow with the
Department of Health Policy at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.
Access
to supportive care varied among demographic groups. Patients who were
older, non-Hispanic white, had longer survival durations, or lived in
rural areas, as well as areas with lower socioeconomic levels, were less
likely to receive supportive care.
“For
dying patients and their caregivers, hospice is often considered the
gold standard of end-of-life that can holistically manage care needs,”
the authors noted. “The fact that a considerable portion did not use
hospice care at all or entered into hospice care within 3 days of death
suggests the potential benefits of hospice care were not realized for
many patients.”
The findings underscore the need for multi-faceted efforts to optimize the quality of end-of-life care for cancer patients.
“Having
clear and honest communication between patients, their caregivers, and
providers regarding disease prognosis and advanced planning is crucial,”
said Kwon. “At the same time, policies to increase access to supportive
care and ensure an adequate workforce of palliative care providers are
necessary to address structural barriers to high-quality care.”
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