Refusal of
medical and surgical interventions common among
chronically ill elderly
Chronically ill older persons frequently refuse medical and
surgical interventions recommended by their
physicians, according to a recent study by Yale
School of Medicine researchers. The study
suggests that physicians continue to recommend
invasive or risky interventions for people with
advanced illness despite the patient’s view that
these treatments may be too burdensome, or that
the treatment doesn’t fit with their goals of
care.
“Physicians need to offer treatment alternatives that better
fit their patients’ goals and preferences,” said
first author Marc Rothman, M.D., postdoctoral
fellow in geriatrics in the Department of
Internal Medicine at Yale.
Published in the July Journal of General Internal Medicine,
the study explored the treatment preferences of
226 persons age 60 and older with advanced
cancer, congestive heart failure, or chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease.
Trained research assistants conducted in-home interviews with
participants at least every four months for
up to two years, but more frequently if the
patient’s health status changed (i.e.,
hospitalizations or initiation of hospice
services). Patients were asked whether they
had refused or undergone any treatments
recommended by their physicians, and why.
They were asked to estimate their own
longevity, about their desire for prognostic
information from physicians, and about their
prior experiences with medical
decision-making.
Researchers found that 16 percent of these patients reported
refusing one or more medical or surgical
interventions recommended by their physician.
The most frequently refused interventions were
cardiac catheterization and surgery, with
refusal rates of over 10 percent. Other
interventions refused included chemotherapy,
radiation, intubation, dialysis, and
transplantation. Hospitalization was rarely
refused.
The most common reasons given for treatment refusals were
fear of side effects. Patients who refused
treatments were more likely to have congestive
heart failure, to rate their own longevity at
less than two years, and to want their
physicians to discuss their prognosis with them.
The mortality rate among those who had refused
treatments was higher than those who had not.
“Our study highlights the frequency with which older persons
with advanced illness refuse treatments
recommended by their physicians,” said Rothman.
“This frequency of refusal suggests that
physicians may be recommending treatments for
these patients that pose unacceptable burdens or
that fail to meet patients’ goals. Patients with
advanced illness may require a broader range of
treatment alternatives, so that they can select
the option that best meets their goals of care.”
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Other authors on the study included Peter H. Van Ness, John
R. O’Leary and Terri R. Fried, M.D.
Citation: Journal of General Internal Medicine, (July 2007)