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Few Cancer
services provided to Nursing Home residents
Elderly nursing home residents receive relatively few cancer
care services, including screening, surgical
treatment, or hospice care.
Few studies have examined cancer treatment and care among
elderly patients residing in nursing homes.
Yet as the U.S. population ages, more people
will move into nursing homes, many of whom
will later be diagnosed with cancer. Cancer
risk increases as people age.
Cathy Bradley, Ph.D., of the Virginia Commonwealth University
Massey Cancer Center in Richmond and
colleagues assessed the cancer care received
by elderly nursing home residents who were
insured by Medicaid.
Using data from the Michigan Tumor Registry and Medicare
records, they identified 1,907 nursing home
residents diagnosed with cancer.
They analyzed the patient data by cancer stage at diagnosis,
type of cancer, survival time, and whether
the patient received surgery or hospice
care, as well as other variables.
Sixty-two percent of the nursing home residents with cancer
had late or unstaged disease when they were
diagnosed, and almost half died within three
months of diagnosis. Among patients with
late stage cancer, only 28 percent received
hospice care. Patients aged 71 to 75 were
three times more likely to have surgery than
patients aged 86 and older.
“An aging population, coupled with trends in cancer diagnosis
and treatment, will shift more cancer
care…to nursing homes and make
investigations into the care of nursing home
cancer patients particularly relevant. At
present, nursing homes may be unequipped to
recognize and care for their residents with
cancer,” the authors write.
In an accompanying editorial, Noreen Aziz, M.D., Ph.D., and
Keith Bellizzi, Ph.D., of the National
Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Md., describe
the essential components of cancer care,
which include treatment, follow-up care, and
palliative care. They also discuss the
importance of further studies on the cancer
care needs of this unique population of
elderly nursing home residents.
“Optimal palliative care will often require multidisciplinary
approaches and treatment plans made in
accordance with the wishes of, and in
partnership with, the patient and family,
with a goal of decreasing morbidity and a
focus on quality of life,” the editorialists
write.
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