Physicians Push For More Palliative Care Despite Barriers; 91% Say Patients Not Informed
‘..greatest challenge may be simply preparing physicians to talk about end-of-life care with their patients, … it can
be an intensely emotional and difficult’
By Jessica Marcy
 Ezekiel J. Emanuel (Photo by Tarek Rizk/Aspen
Institute) |
Nov. 16, 2011 - A
poll released Tuesday found that an overwhelming majority of doctors support
palliative care, with 96 percent responding that they believe enhancing the quality of life for seriously ill patients is more important than
extending life as long as possible. Despite these sentiments, many physicians responded that they have some hesitations about palliative care
and that there are barriers to its full adoption.
Notably, the poll, released by National Journal and The Regence Foundation, also found a dramatic “generation gap” in
physicians’ education and training on palliative care. Seventy-three percent of physicians age 39 or younger report “a great deal” or “some”
exposure to palliative care during medical school compared to 36 percent of those age 40-49, 23 percent of those age 50-59, and only 6 percent
of those age 60 or older.
| |
Related Stories |
|
| |
New Fact Sheets on Critical Caregiving Issues Offered Free by Family Caregiver Alliance
Developed in response to needs for clear, unbiased information about caregiving
- Sept. 21, 2011
Study Says Medicare
Cuts Will Send Hospice Industry into Profit Loss
Hospice group,
NHPCO, backed study says 88 percent could have negative margins by 2019 - March 7, 2011
Hospice Care
Increasing But Cost of Dying Still Very Costly for Medicare
Almost 42% of
those who died in U.S. last year (2009) were in hospice care; 83% of those were
senior citizens covered by Medicare - Oct. 11, 2010
New Program Improves Communication, Adherence to
End-of-Life Wishes
Power of new Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining
Treatment (POLST) is signature of a physician
July 12, 2010
Researchers Cite Rapid Growth in Medicare Hospice
Care, Suggest Change in Pay, Eligibility
Recommend changing rates of payment to reflect timing
of the more intense care needs; tighter rules for determining hospice
eligibility
July 9, 2010
Read more
Elder Care & Caregivers News |
|
Speaking at a
National Journal event Tuesday, oncologist and bioethicist Ezekiel Emanuel, who
currently teaches at the
University of Pennsylvania, called upon the medical community to push for even
greater incorporation of palliative care into the health system.
Emanuel, the brother of Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, said that his own career illustrates the major transformation in
end-of-life care training. In 1984, during his third year of medical school, he decided to switch gears to pursue a PhD on end-of-life care
issues, noting that his adviser told him, “That’s a career ender. Nobody wants to talk about end-of-life care.”
Despite such initial discouragement, he went on to incorporate palliative care in oncology treatment at the Dana-Farber
Cancer Institute and later served as the
founding chair of the Department of Bioethics at the NIH Clinical Center until
last August and as a special health policy adviser at the White House, where he raised attention about ethical issues in end-of-life care.
Emanuel emphasized that the greatest challenge may be simply preparing physicians to talk about end-of-life care with
their patients, noting that it can be an intensely emotional and difficult conversation.
91% of physicians believe patients not adequately informed about palliative care
Meanwhile, the poll found that 91 percent of physicians believe patients are not adequately informed about palliative
care; other physician concerns include that patients are reluctant to accept it because it means they might not recover, health insurance
companies and Medicare don’t reimburse adequately for consultations, there aren’t enough palliative care physicians and services and patients
can’t afford the care.
The poll found that 79 percent of physicians think the health care system spends too much trying to extend life while 21
percent believes the system should do whatever it takes. Many physicians also reported that they received little training on operational and
financial aspects of palliative care and that they would like more on those topics.
Shannon Brownlee, the New American Foundation’s acting health policy director,
expressed concerns that the current reimbursement system inhibits the full use of palliative care, which would lead to the reduction of
expensive treatment. “This is the horrible dilemma that hospitals find themselves in,” Brownlee said. “When you reduce that volume, you’re
punished.”
Emanuel said that at some point insurers and Medicare will have to “make a leap together” to better support paying for
palliative care. Emanuel, recalling Republican charges that the 2010 health law would establish
“death panels,” noted that such political tactics “completely backfired.”
Instead, he said they reinvigorated physicians’ efforts to improve end-of-life care.
“My inbox was flooded with support from physicians and it renewed the recognition by physicians that we have to do
something on this,” Emanuel said.
The poll, conducted by FTI Consulting, surveyed 500 board-certified physicians, 45 percent of whom were primary care
providers and 55 percent specialists between Oct. 28-Nov. 2. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 4 points.
Updated at 10:30 a.m. on Nov. 16 to correctly identify the poll sponsors.
>> For latest updates and comments, see
report at KHN
|
Some
of this
information is reprinted from
kaiserhealthnews.org with permission from the Henry J.
Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser
Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up
for email delivery. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All
rights reserved. |
|
Nursing Home Abuse, Medical Malpractice? Contact a lawyer.
click here
|
|