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Items of Interest:
Novel approach to end-of-life care
considers whole community's values
Last Updated:
2001-09-25 16:36:04 EDT (Reuters Health)
By Steven
Reinberg
WESTPORT, CT (Reuters Health) - In line with a 1997
recommendation of the Institute of Medicine, researchers
have adopted a community-based approach to studying how
to improve end-of-life care
"We have developed a way of using data to improve the
quality of care and the quality of life community-wide,"
Dr. Ira Byock from the University of Montana, Missoula,
told Reuters Health. "We have created a conceptual
framework for communities so that they can continuously
improve the quality of care and support during illness,
dying and grief."
In Missoula, Dr. Byock and colleagues asked patients
and family members what medical and social services were
important to them as part of caregiving, illness, dying
and grief.
"We looked at hopes and then we measured outcomes;
that is, what those in the midst of an illness or those
having gone through the death of a loved one actually
experienced. And we zeroed in on the areas where the
people's hopes are not matched by the outcomes," Dr.
Byock explained.
In each instance where the researchers found a gap
between expectations and reality, they engaged the public
and the professional community in a dialogue to try to
bridge that gap. To bring community values in line with
actual outcomes, they developed an educational program
and practical tools that could be used community-wide,
which they describe in the September issue of the Journal
of Pain and Symptom Management.
"For example, we now use one pain scale for the whole
community of Missoula. And to develop a single advanced
directive form, we went door-to-door to get opinions and
develop a form called 'My Choices,' which is used
throughout the community," Dr. Byock said.
The same conceptual framework can apply in a single
patient or family dialogue with physicians, he said. "It
is important to elicit people's values and help them base
decisions on those values, because values can clarify
preferences for care," Dr. Byock stressed.
J Pain Symptom Manage 2001;22:759-772.
-Westport Newsroom 203 319 2700
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actions taken in reliance thereon.
Report Urges More Attention On Cancer Care
By Troy
Goodman
The Salt Lake
Tribune
Wednesday,
June 20, 2001
When an advanced cancer patient died from his disease
recently, Utah pain expert Kyle Matsumura took some
comfort in the 60-year-old man's passing on.
Matsumura was able to ease the suffering, after all,
since several of the lung cancer patient's final weeks
were spent under the watchful eye of St. Mark's Hospital
palliative care program, were Matsumura works. Doctors
there provided pain medication, physical and emotional
support far beyond what an oncologist could provide.
But that level of care is not universal in Utah or
other U.S. hospitals, according to a National Academy of
Sciences advisory panel. The group said doctors too often
ignore supportive therapy while they are single-minded in
search of a cancer cure.
"Not every physician has the time to commit to
palliative care," Matsumura said Tuesday, in response to
the panel's report. "There are magnifying factors [for
dying patients'] symptoms."
The panel, a group assembled by the nonprofit
Institute of Medicine and other researchers, found most
American cancer patients do not get an adequate mix of
cancer symptom control and freedom to choose
disease-fighting drugs. A pair of Salt Lake City-based
pain experts, both working at Huntsman Cancer Institute,
were among those who helped write the report.
"It's a suprising realization for many people," said
Sharon Weinstein, who heads the Huntsman palliative care
program and worked with colleague Joseph Simone to help
craft the report.
"These symptom management guidelines and other
elements of supportive care need to be integrated from
the point of diagnosis" and not later, Weinstein
said.
While cancer cure rates for some specific forms of the
disease are on the upswing, the panel report said, half
of all cancer patients die within a few years of that
diagnosis point. The toll comes to 550,000 American lives
annually, cancer data show.
"In accepting a single-minded focus on research toward
cure, we have inadvertently devalued the critical need to
care for and support patients with advanced disease and
their families," the panel concluded.
The result: Many patients are overloaded with mental
anguish, anxiety, depression, fear and isolation during a
time when their life is already a living hell, according
to the report, entitled "Improving Palliative Care for
Cancer."
To improve supportive care measures, the National
Cancer Institute, the government's anti-cancer arm, spent
less than 1 percent of its 1999 budget of $2.9 billion on
research and training related to palliative care, the
report found.
Huntsman, which has been running a palliative care
clinic for several years and treats about 1,500 patients
each year for severe pain management, doesn't track
clinic costs as they relate directly to total budget
dollars. But officials there said about 10 percent of the
funds used in clinical care are spent on support and
palliative care.
More than half of all dying patients use hospice
services, experts said, but health insurance programs
often force patients to choose between such end-of-life
programs or treatments aimed at prolonging their
life.
The ideal, Weinstein and Matsumura said,
would be benefits that include both cancer-care
measures.
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