Early attention to quality of life reduces hospital costs for advanced cancer patients
Journal of Clinical Oncology posts study online at 4pm EST June 8th
2015-06-08
(Press-News.org) New York, NY-- Earlier introduction of palliative care for patients hospitalized with advanced cancer is associated with lower hospital costs, according to a new study published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. The findings support a growing body of evidence that suggests that early provision of palliative care not only enhances the quality of medical care received by patients and families with serious illness, but does so at a lower cost than traditional oncologic care.
The observational study, funded by the National Cancer Institute and National Institute for Nursing Research, compared the clinical and cost data from 969 adult patients with an advanced cancer diagnosis in five US hospitals from 2007 to 2011, with 256 patients receiving palliative care and traditional oncologic care and 713 receiving traditional oncologic care alone. Comparison of the two groups showed:
Palliative care consultation within six days of hospitalization reduced hospital costs by $1,312 as compared to patients receiving traditional care
Palliative care consultation within two days of hospitalization reduced hospital costs by an additional $968 more as compared to patients receiving traditional care for a total of $2,208.
Respectively, these reductions were equivalent to a 14% and a 24% reduction in the cost of hospital stay.
"As our population ages and patterns of disease continue to shift, there is an urgent need for affordable models of care for patients living with serious illness that improve quality and access," explained R. Sean Morrison, MD, senior author of the study and director of the National Palliative Care Research Center. The results of this study suggest that palliative care has its greatest effect when provided early in the course of hospitalization.
Palliative care provides specialized medical attention for people with serious illnesses, with a focus on relief from the symptoms, pain, and stress of a serious illness - whatever the diagnosis. The goal is to improve quality of life for both the patient and the family, and is appropriate at any age and at any stage in a serious illness, and can be provided along with curative treatment. Care is delivered by a team of doctors, nurses and other specialists who work together with a patient's primary physicians to provide an extra layer of support.
INFORMATION:
The manuscript, "Prospective cohort study of hospital palliative care teams for inpatients with advanced cancer: earlier consultation is associated with larger cost-saving effect," will be published as an Early Release Article on http://jco.ascopubs.org/content/early/recent. Authors of the paper include Peter May and Charles Normand, PhD, Centre for Health Policy and Management, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland; Melissa M. Garrido, MD, Amy S. Kelley, MD, Diane E. Meier, MD, Lee Stefanis, and R. Sean Morrison, MD, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York; J. Brian Cassel, PhD, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, V; and Thomas J. Smith, MD, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, MD.
ABOUT THE CENTER TO ADVANCE PALLIATIVE CARE
The Center to Advance Palliative Care (CAPC) is a national organization dedicated to increasing palliative care services for people facing serious illness. It is part of The Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City. http://www.capc.org
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2015-06-08
New Haven, Conn. -- Gay and bisexual men living in European countries with strong attitudes and policies against homosexuality are far less likely to use HIV-prevention services, test for HIV, and discuss their sexuality with health providers, according to research led by Yale School of Public Health (YSPH).
The study is published online in the journal AIDS.
Attitudes about homosexuality vary greatly across Europe, noted YSPH associate professor and lead author John Pachankis and his colleagues. The research team wanted to investigate the impact of homophobia on gay and ...
2015-06-08
CHICAGO -- A toxin secreted by Vibrio vulnificus, a water and food-borne bacteria that can cause rapidly lethal infections in persons with liver disease, has potential to prevent the growth of tumors, according to a new study by Northwestern Medicine scientists.
Karla Satchell, a professor in microbiology-immunology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, and her team demonstrated in a paper in Nature Communications, that a multifunctional-autoprocessing repeats-in-toxin (MARTX) protein from Vibrio vulnificus can inhibit tumor cell growth by cutting the ...
2015-06-08
Boulder, Colo., USA - Quenched glasses formed by asteroid impacts can encapsulate and preserve biological material for millions of years on Earth, and can also serve as a substrate for microbial life. These impact glasses are thus an important target to search for signs of ancient life on Mars, but until now they have not been definitively detected on the martian surface.
In this study, Kevin Cannon and John Mustard used orbital remotely sensed data to investigate spectral signatures of geologic units on Mars that were formed during impacts (impactites).
Using spectral ...
2015-06-08
PITTSBURGH--It has been well established that people have a "bias blind spot," meaning that they are less likely to detect bias in themselves than others. However, how blind we are to our own actual degree of bias, and how many of us think we are less biased than others have been less clear.
Published in Management Science, new research from Carnegie Mellon University, the City University London, Boston University and the University of Colorado, Boulder, has developed a tool to measure the bias blind spot, and reveals that believing that you are less biased than your ...
2015-06-08
DARIEN, IL - A new study suggests that those at risk of hoarding disorder may have serious complaints about sleep.
Results show that participants at risk of hoarding disorder scored significantly higher on the Sleep Habits Survey (SH) and on three sub-scales of the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), including sleep latency; sleep disturbances and daytime disturbances.
"Hoarders typically have problems with decision making and executive function; poor sleep is known to compromise cognition generally, so if hoarders have cluttered/unusable bedrooms (and less comfortable, ...
2015-06-08
Evolutionary theorist Stephen Jay Gould is famous for describing the evolution of humans and other conscious beings as a chance accident of history. If we could go back millions of years and "run the tape of life again," he mused, evolution would follow a different path.
A study by University of Pennsylvania biologists now provides evidence Gould was correct, at the molecular level: Evolution is both unpredictable and irreversible. Using simulations of an evolving protein, they show that the genetic mutations that are accepted by evolution are typically dependent on ...
2015-06-08
Planets with volcanic activity are considered better candidates for life than worlds without such heated internal goings-on.
Now, graduate students at the University of Washington have found a way to detect volcanic activity in the atmospheres of exoplanets, or those outside our solar system, when they transit, or pass in front of their host stars.
Their findings, published in the June issue of the journal Astrobiology, could aid the process of choosing worlds to study for possible life, and even one day help determine not only that a world is habitable, but in fact ...
2015-06-08
Researchers in UC Santa Barbara professor Yasamin Mostofi's lab are proving that wireless signals can do more than provide Internet access. They have demonstrated that a WiFi signal can be used to count the number of people in a given space, leading to diverse applications, from energy efficiency to search-and-rescue.
'Our approach can estimate the number of people walking in an area, based on only the received power measurements of a WiFi link,' said Mostofi, a professor of electrical and computer engineering. This approach does not require people to carry WiFi-enabled ...
2015-06-08
DARIEN, Ill. -- A new study suggests that poor sleep quality is associated with reduced resilience among veterans and returning military personnel.
Results show that 63 percent of participants endorsed poor sleep quality, which was negatively associated with resilience. Longer sleep onset, lower sleep efficiency, shorter sleep duration, worse sleep quality, and greater daytime disturbance were each associated with lower resilience. Findings suggest that appraisal of sleep quality may contribute to resilience scores more than self-reported sleep efficiency.
'To our knowledge, ...
2015-06-08
In 2009, scientists from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution embarked on a NASA-funded mission to the Mid-Cayman Rise in the Caribbean, in search of a type of deep-sea hot-spring or hydrothermal vent that they believed held clues to the search for life on other planets. They were looking for a site with a venting process that produces a lot of hydrogen because of the potential it holds for the chemical, or abiotic, creation of organic molecules like methane - possible precursors to the prebiotic compounds from which life on Earth emerged.
For more than a decade, the ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Early attention to quality of life reduces hospital costs for advanced cancer patients
Journal of Clinical Oncology posts study online at 4pm EST June 8th