PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Advance directives manage end of life care issues and reduce end of life medical costs

2013-05-08
(Press-News.org) A new article available online in the American Journal of Public Health by two Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health faculty makes a compelling case that end-of-life care issues need to become an integral part of the public health agenda. Dan Morhaim, MD, and Keshia Pollack, PhD, point out that the low rate of completion of advance directives in the minority population can be identified as another health care disparity.

Advance directive documents are free, legally binding and readily available, yet too few Americans have completed one. Although end-of-life discussions can be difficult, Morhaim and Pollack recommend that advance directive conversations become routine between doctors, nurses, and other key health providers and their patients, and be viewed as another aspect of preventive care.

"The reality is the subject of advance directives is not yet a standard part of most medical examinations," said Morhaim, lead author of the article. "It's important this discussion becomes a routine part of our care giving, because the more normal the topic is, the less scary it will become. As the baby boomer generation continues to age and is impacted by chronic diseases, and as medical technology advances, it is inevitable that health care costs will continue to escalate. Increasing awareness and the completion rate of advance directives can have a positive impact on the economic, moral and ethical issues related to end-of-life care."

End-of-life care consumes an estimated 30 percent of Medicare expenditures, and the impact on Medicaid and commercial insurance costs is substantial as well. Increasing the rate of completion of advance directives could conceivably lower these expenses and would do so by respecting patients' values and wishes.

Typically advance directives address several areas regarding end-of-life care when a person becomes unable to make medical decisions for him or herself, including defining the type and amount of care he or she might receive under various medical circumstances, designating a health care agent to make medical decisions when the individual is no longer able to do so, and other end-of-life care issues including organ donation as well as funeral and burial.

Keshia Pollack, PhD, associate professor, Health Policy and Management, and study co-author, said "Increasing the rate of completion of advance directives in the United States, empowering individuals and families to determine their care decisions at a critical time, and reducing unwanted end-of-life care expenses needs to become part of the public health agenda. Our research shows the public wants to have control of their life, even at the end, and are looking to their physicians or other health professionals to lead the way and initiate these discussions. "

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Soy and tomato combo may be effective in preventing prostate cancer

2013-05-08
URBANA – Tomatoes and soy foods may be more effective in preventing prostate cancer when they are eaten together than when either is eaten alone, said a University of Illinois study. "In our study, we used mice that were genetically engineered to develop an aggressive form of prostate cancer. Even so, half the animals that had consumed tomato and soy had no cancerous lesions in the prostate at study's end. All the mice in the control group--no soy, no tomato--developed the disease," said John Erdman, a U of I professor of food science and nutrition. From the time they ...

Cannibal tadpoles key to understanding digestive evolution

2013-05-08
A carnivorous, cannibalistic tadpole may play a role in understanding the evolution and development of digestive organs, according to research from North Carolina State University. These findings may also shed light on universal rules of organ development that could lead to better diagnosis and prevention of intestinal birth defects. NC State developmental biologist Nanette Nascone-Yoder, graduate student Stephanie Bloom and postdoc Cris Ledon-Rettig looked at Xenopus laevis (African clawed frog) and Lepidobatrachus laevis (Budgett's frog) tadpoles. These frog species ...

Robot-assisted kidney cancer surgery offers many benefits, but at a cost

2013-05-08
SAN DIEGO – Robot-assisted surgery to remove kidney cancers has seen a rapid increase in use, and has both replaced and proven safer than laparoscopic procedures for the same purpose, according to a study by the Vattikuti Urology Institute at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit. However, the study also shows that robotic partial nephrectomy (RPN) – while resulting in fewer complications than both open (OPN) and laparoscopic (LPN) removal of cancerous kidney tissue – also involves more "excessive" hospital charges. "Excessive hospital charges were significantly higher with ...

Genes show 1 big European family

2013-05-08
From Ireland to the Balkans, Europeans are basically one big family, closely related to one another for the past thousand years, according to a new study of the DNA of people from across the continent. The study, co-authored by Graham Coop, a professor of evolution and ecology at the University of California, Davis, will be published May 7 in the journal PLoS Biology. "What's remarkable about this is how closely everyone is related to each other. On a genealogical level, everyone in Europe traces back to nearly the same set of ancestors only a thousand years ago," Coop ...

Minimally invasive VATS-LCSD helps children with refractory ventricular arrhythmias

2013-05-08
Minneapolis, MN, May 7, 2013 - Inherited ventricular arrhythmias are an important cause of morbidity and sudden cardiac death in children who have structurally normal hearts. Despite conventional medical therapy, some of these children remain symptomatic with recurrent life-threatening arrhythmias, syncope, or frequent discharges from implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs). Video-assisted thoracoscopic left cardiac sympathetic denervation (VATS-LCSD) is a minimally invasive procedure that can help many of these children with refractory cardiac arrhythmias. The results ...

1 big European family

2013-05-08
From Ireland to the Balkans, Europeans are all closely related according to a new study of the DNA of people from across the continent. The study, conducted by Graham Coop at the University of California, Davis, and Peter Ralph of the University of Southern California, examined relatedness among Europeans up to about 3,000 years ago, comparing genetic sequences from over 2,000 individuals. Their results are published 7 May in the open access journal PLOS Biology. The researchers found that the extent to which two people are related tends to be smaller the farther apart ...

Older people in Africa have limited functional ability

2013-05-08
Many adults 45 years and older in Africa have limited functional ability The number of adults living into older age in sub-Saharan Africa is rapidly growing yet many older men and women will have an illness or disability that limits their ability to function, according to a study by researchers from the US and Malawi published in this week's PLOS Medicine. The researchers, led by Collin Payne from the University of Pennsylvania, also show that remaining life spent with severe limitations at age 45 in a sub Saharan African setting (Malawi) is comparable to that of 80-year-olds ...

Link between intimate partner violence and depression

2013-05-08
Not only are women who have experienced violence from their partner (intimate partner violence) at higher risk of becoming depressed, but women who are depressed may also be at increased risk of experiencing intimate partner violence, according to a study by international researchers published in this week's PLOS Medicine. Furthermore, there may also be a link between intimate partner violence and subsequent suicide among women, but little evidence to support a similar finding in men. The researchers led by Karen Devries from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical ...

Antimicrobial resistance in Vietnam

2013-05-08
Heiman Wertheim and Arjun Chandna from Oxford University and colleagues describe the launch and impact of VINARES, an initiative to strengthen antimicrobial stewardship in Viet Nam, which may be instructive for other countries struggling to address the threat of antimicrobial resistance. Antimicrobial resistance is increasingly recognised as a serious contemporary global health threat (with numerous calls for action from the international community), but while interventions to control antimicrobial resistance are available, implementation is developing countries (where ...

PLOS Collection assesses measurement of health interventions for women and children in LMICs

2013-05-08
New PLOS Collection assesses the measurement of whether much needed health interventions are reaching women and children across the developing world Measuring coverage of maternal, newborn and child health in low- and middle-income countries is critical to ensuring that health interventions are reaching the women and children who need them most, says a new Collection of articles published by PLOS this week. Accurate measurement of the effectiveness of those interventions for combatting diseases such as pneumonia and malaria, and preventing the transmission of HIV from ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Mount Sinai team shows AI can detect serious neurologic changes in babies in the NICU using video data alone

Jeffrey Popma, MD, joins CRF as Chief Scientific and Strategic Officer

Seiber elevated to IEEE senior member

Study sheds light on how BRCA1 gene mutations fuel breast cancer

A new wrinkle in turtles: Their genomes fold in a unique way, Iowa State researchers find

Adequate sleep significantly reduces the risk of hypertension in adolescents, according to new study

Research spotlight: Uncovering the mechanisms behind T cell differentiation

Study reveals best timing for getting the RSV vaccine during pregnancy to protect newborns

Could lights stop shark attacks

Alarming increase in alcohol use during pandemic persists

Pandemic-era increase in alcohol use persists

A new milestone in the study of octopus arms

Fighting microplastics for a cleaner future

Tumor suppressor forms gel-like assemblies to sacrifice cancer cells

New research uncovers how Barred Owls interact with urban areas and why it matters

50 years of survey data confirm African elephant decline

Swirling polar vortices likely exist on the Sun, new research finds

Protein degradation strategy offers new hope in cancer therapy

Mental fatigue leads to loss of self-control by putting brain areas to sleep

Was ‘Snowball Earth’ a global event? New study delivers best proof yet

Scientists issue call to action underlining importance of microbial solutions to tackle climate crisis

Ochsner Transplant Institute among site collaborators in New England Journal of Medicine HIV-to-HIV kidney transplant study

Scientists call for global action on microbial climate solutions

New antibody could be promising cancer treatment

The public implications of private substitutes for electric grid reliability

Religiosity, spirituality, and meaning-making generally associated with lower suicidality

Eife studying legal surveillance as social determinant of health

Newly developed 100Gbps data transfer system for accelerating Open Science through industry-university collaboration in Japan

Navigating bias in AI-driven cancer detection

Research shows stress about personal finances may make leaders abusive in workplace

[Press-News.org] Advance directives manage end of life care issues and reduce end of life medical costs