The ICU care costs more and is a greater drain on state resources, and these cost issues are forcing the Healthcare Association of New York State to take notice of this disparity. So, we may have a case in which a bankrupt healthcare system is pushing us toward better end-of-life care for patients, in some instances. I think this section of the article sums the issue up nicely:
"Under pressure to cut costs, New York's hospital industry is finally welcoming a new focus on palliative care.
That means letting patients and their families know when medicine has reached its limits and spelling out the options, which include foregoing drastic interventions that would cause patients to spend their last days in expensive intensive care. Recognizing it's a sensitive issue, hospitals are making a point of saying they do not prevent patients from choosing interventions. The idea is to help people make the best choices for themselves, said Dr. Tia Powell, a medical ethicist at Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx."
2 comments:
This is a shame. Fortunately the benefits,including financial burden, of dying in a hospice setting is gaining recognition.
The sick ought to receive good end of life care. Newton@ Kenyatta University School of medicine
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