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Palliative Care Experts focus on comfort before Death
Palliative
care specialists study how to manage a
patient's last months to give comfort. One
expert says end-of-life consultations are
just what Americans need to deal with death.
This field has "become a recognized subspecialty, with
fellowships, hospital departments and
medical school courses aimed at managing
patients' last months.
It has also become a focus of attacks on plans to overhaul
the nation's medical system....
Many physicians dismiss these complaints as an absurd
caricature of what palliative medicine is
all about."
"Still, as an aging population wrangles with how to
gracefully face the certainty of death, the
moral and economic questions presented by
palliative care are unavoidable: How much do
we want, and need, to know about the
inevitable?
"Is the withholding of heroic treatment a blessing, a
rationing of medical care or a step toward
euthanasia?
"A third of Medicare spending goes to patients with chronic
illness in their last two years of life; the
elderly, who receive much of this care, are
a huge political constituency.
Does calling on one more team of specialists at the end of
a long and final hospital stay reduce this
spending, or add another cost to already
bloated medical bills?" (Hartocollis, 8/19).
Meanwhile,
Newsweek interviews Dr. Diane Meier, a
palliative-medicine specialist at Mount
Sinai Medical Center in New York and
director of the Center to Advance Palliative
Care, about end-of-life consultations.
"Ninety percent of Americans say they would prefer to die
at home, yet more than half of us die in
hospitals," the magazine reports.
"The 'death panel' rumors of the last few weeks have
obscured some uncomfortable but important
facts: everyone dies, and end-of-life care
will always be a part of medicine, whether
we like it or not" (Yarett, 8/19).
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