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

Medicare: Barrier to hospice increases hospitalization

2012-10-31
(Press-News.org) PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — A Medicare rule that blocks thousands of nursing home residents from receiving simultaneous reimbursement for hospice and skilled nursing facility (SNF) care at the end of life may result in those residents receiving more aggressive treatment and hospitalization, according a new analysis.

"This study is the first, to the knowledge of the authors, to attempt to understand how treatments and outcomes vary for nursing home residents with advanced dementia who use Medicare SNF care near the end of life and who do or do not enroll in Medicare hospice," wrote researchers, including lead author Susan Miller, research professor of health services policy and practice at Brown University, in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

Miller said the outcomes are often unwanted treatments.

"Unfortunately, given the high use of Medicare skilled care near the end of life and policy that prevents simultaneous Medicare reimbursement for skilled nursing and hospice care, aggressive treatments that may not be the preference of families or their loved ones are common," she said.

The federal government will investigate this issue under the Medicare Hospice Concurrent Care demonstration project mandated by the Affordable Care Act.

About half of all nursing home residents dying with advanced dementia have Medicare SNF care in the last 90 days of life, but residents with this care are not allowed to receive simultaneous hospice and SNF Medicare reimbursement for the same terminal illness. The two services have different medical goals.

Because of the rule, previous research has reported, 46 percent of residents with advanced dementia but no SNF use hospice, while only 30 percent of similar residents who do have SNF use hospice (some residents can still end up with both services simultaneously if, for instance, SNF addresses a different condition than their terminal illness).

What Miller and her colleagues found is that whether and when SNF patients have access to hospice makes an important difference in the care they receive at end of life. That matters to many families, because it is not an easy decision, emotionally or financially, to give up SNF in favor of hospice.

"What I've heard from physicians is that families may be advised about hospice, but when the family learns that by choosing hospice and thus giving up SNF they'd have to pay for the entire nursing home stay, they will choose SNF over hospice," she said. "One physician told me a story about a significant other who wanted hospice for their family member. It was cheaper for that person just to quit their job, stay home and care for the person and get hospice rather than to pay for nursing home care because the nursing home cost more than they were making."

To conduct her analysis, Miller and her co-authors studied the Medicare records of 4,344 nursing home residents with SNF care and advanced dementia who died in 2006. Of the sample, 1,086 received hospice care either concurrent with SNF or afterward. The other 3,528 patients were demographically and medically similar, but did not receive hospice care.

One of team's key findings was that residents with hospice either during or after SNF care were far less likely to die in the hospital than people without hospice. Those with concurrent SNF and hospice were 87 percent less likely to die in the hospital. Those with hospice after SNF were 98 percent less likely. In the meantime, the data showed the patients with hospice received less aggressive treatments in many other ways. Fewer received feeding tubes, medications (except hypnotic and antianxiety drugs), IV fluids, and occupational or physical therapy than those with no hospice.

The researchers also measured two key outcomes that were more complicated to interpret: persistent difficulty breathing and persistent pain. Residents with hospice after SNF were 37 percent less likely than those without hospice to experience persistent difficulty breathing, or dyspnea, but residents with concurrent hospice and SNF had no significant difference in their experience of this problem. With persistent pain, those with hospice after SNF were not less likely to experience it than residents with no hospice, but those with concurrent SNF and hospice were 65 percent more likely to experience pain.

Miller said that the pain comparison, in particular, is puzzling because of the subjectivity of measuring pain and the likelihood that people who elect hospice care do so in part because of elevated levels of pain.

Overall, Miller said, the results show that the Medicare rule that reduces access to hospice at end of life significantly affects the treatment nursing home residents receive.

Whether it is worth it, from a cost perspective, to change the policy, is not clear, Miller said. The ACA-mandated demonstration will help answer that. But evidence from prior studies suggests that Medicare does tend to save money when nursing home residents do not have long hospice stays. Miller said she plans future studies to look at costs and alternative ways to bring palliative care to nursing home patients with advanced dementia.

INFORMATION:

In addition to Miller, the paper's other authors are Julie Lima of Brown and Dr. Susan Mitchell of the Institute for Aging Research at Hebrew Senior Life and Deaconness Medical Center in Boston.

The Alzheimer's Association (grant 2008-086) and the National Institute on Aging (grants AG027296 and AG033640) funded the study.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Fat molecule ceramide may factor in muscle loss in older adults

2012-10-31
As men and women age, increasing quantities of fat tissue inevitably take up residence in skeletal muscle. A small study of older and younger men conducted at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University suggests that a build-up of a fat molecule known as ceramide might play a leading role in muscle deterioration in older adults. The results of the study were published online this month by the Journal of Applied Physiology, a publication of the American Physiological Society. The study enrolled ten 10 men in their mid-seventies to ...

Guidelines developed for extremely premature infants at NCH proven to be life-changing

Guidelines developed for extremely premature infants at NCH proven to be life-changing
2012-10-31
VIDEO: For the last decade, prematurity has been the leading cause of infant mortality in the US. As a result of prematurity, many infants enter this world too early with a... Click here for more information. For the last decade, prematurity has been the leading cause of infant mortality in the United States. As a result of prematurity many infants enter this world too early with a small chance of survival. In order to help treat these extremely premature infants, physicians ...

Confirmation of nitisinone efficacy for life-threatening liver disease

2012-10-31
A consortium of Quebec researchers coordinated by the Medical Genetics Service of the Sainte-Justine UHC has just published the findings of a 25-year study on the treatment of tyrosinemia, a life-threatening liver disease of genetic origin, which is screened at birth in the province of Quebec, where it is much more frequent than anywhere else in the world. "After five years of treatment, no trace of the disease can be detected in the liver of newborns who were treated with nitisinone starting from the first month of life," states Dr. Grant Mitchell of the Sainte-Justine ...

The controversy over flame retardants in millions of sofas, chairs and other products

2012-10-31
Flame retardants in the polyurethane foam of millions of upholstered sofas, overstuffed chairs and other products have ignited a heated debate over safety, efficacy and fire-safety standards -- and a search for alternative materials. That's the topic of a cover story package in the current edition of Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN), the weekly newsmagazine of ACS, the world's largest scientific society. An overview of the package describes the controversy, fostered largely by a California chemist, who claims that flame retardants pose unacceptable toxic hazards and ...

A heady discovery for beer fans: The first gene for beer foam could improve froth

2012-10-31
The yeast used to make beer has yielded what may be the first gene for beer foam, scientists are reporting in a new study. Published in ACS' Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, the discovery opens the door to new possibilities for improving the frothy "head" so critical to the aroma and eye appeal of the world's favorite alcoholic beverage, they say. Tomás G. Villa and colleagues explain that proteins from the barley and yeast used to make beer contribute to the quality of its foam. The foamy head consists of bubbles containing carbon dioxide gas, which yeast ...

New micropumps for hand-held medical labs produce pressures 500 times higher than car tire

2012-10-31
In an advance toward analyzing blood and urine instantly at a patient's bedside instead of waiting for results from a central laboratory, scientists are reporting development of a new micropump capable of producing pressures almost 500 times higher than the pressure in a car tire. Described in ACS' journal Analytical Chemistry, the pumps are for futuristic "labs-on-a-chip," which reduce entire laboratories to the size of a postage stamp. Shaorong Liu and colleagues explain that powerful pumps are critical for high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), a mainstay laboratory ...

Inspiration from Mother Nature leads to improved wood

2012-10-31
Using the legendary properties of heartwood from the black locust tree as their inspiration, scientists have discovered a way to improve the performance of softwoods widely used in construction. The method, reported in the journal ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, involves addition of similar kinds of flavonoid compounds that boost the health of humans. Ingo Burgert and colleagues explain that wood's position as a mainstay building material over the centuries results from a combination of desirable factors, including surprising strength for a material so light in weight. ...

Automated calls help patients in under-developed countries manage blood pressure, U-M study finds

Automated calls help patients in under-developed countries manage blood pressure, U-M study finds
2012-10-31
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Hypertension is one of the greatest epidemics threatening the health of people in low and middle-income countries. For patients struggling with high blood pressure in countries with limited access to health care, the key to improving health may be as simple as a phone call. New University of Michigan research evaluated the impact of automated calls from a U.S.-based server to the mobile phones of patients with hypertension (high blood pressure) in Honduras and Mexico. The program was designed to be a low-cost way of providing long distance checkups ...

Single protein targeted as the root biological cause of several childhood psychiatric disorders

2012-10-31
A new research discovery has the potential to revolutionize the biological understanding of some childhood psychiatric disorders. Specifically, scientists have found that when a single protein involved in brain development, called "SRGAP3," is malformed, it causes problems in the brain functioning of mice that cause symptoms that are similar to some mental health and neurological disorders in children. Because this protein has similar functions in humans, it may represent a "missing link" for several disorders that are part of an illness spectrum. In addition, it offers ...

Testosterone regulates solo song of tropical birds

Testosterone regulates solo song of tropical birds
2012-10-31
This press release is available in German. In male songbirds of the temperate zone, the concentration of sex hormones is rising in spring, which leads to an increase in song activity during the breeding season. In the tropics, there has been little evidence so far about such a clear relationship between hormonal action and behaviour, which is partly due to a lower degree of seasonal changes of the environment. Researchers of the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Seewiesen have now discovered that in duetting African white-browed sparrow weavers, the solo song of ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Injectable breast ‘implant’ offers alternative to traditional surgeries

Neuroscientists devise formulas to measure multilingualism

New prostate cancer trial seeks to reduce toxicity without sacrificing efficacy

Geometry shapes life

A CRISPR screen reveals many previously unrecognized genes required for brain development and a new neurodevelopmental disorder

Hot flush treatment has anti-breast cancer activity, study finds

Securing AI systems against growing cybersecurity threats

Longest observation of an active solar region

Why nail-biting, procrastination and other self-sabotaging behaviors are rooted in survival instincts

Regional variations in mechanical properties of porcine leptomeninges

Artificial empathy in therapy and healthcare: advancements in interpersonal interaction technologies

Why some brains switch gears more efficiently than others

UVA’s Jundong Li wins ICDM’S 2025 Tao Li Award for data mining, machine learning

UVA’s low-power, high-performance computer power player Mircea Stan earns National Academy of Inventors fellowship

Not playing by the rules: USU researcher explores filamentous algae dynamics in rivers

Do our body clocks influence our risk of dementia?

Anthropologists offer new evidence of bipedalism in long-debated fossil discovery

Safer receipt paper from wood

Dosage-sensitive genes suggest no whole-genome duplications in ancestral angiosperm

First ancient human herpesvirus genomes document their deep history with humans

Why Some Bacteria Survive Antibiotics and How to Stop Them - New study reveals that bacteria can survive antibiotic treatment through two fundamentally different “shutdown modes”

UCLA study links scar healing to dangerous placenta condition

CHANGE-seq-BE finds off-target changes in the genome from base editors

The Journal of Nuclear Medicine Ahead-of-Print Tip Sheet: January 2, 2026

Delayed or absent first dose of measles, mumps, and rubella vaccination

Trends in US preterm birth rates by household income and race and ethnicity

Study identifies potential biomarker linked to progression and brain inflammation in multiple sclerosis

Many mothers in Norway do not show up for postnatal check-ups

Researchers want to find out why quick clay is so unstable

Superradiant spins show teamwork at the quantum scale

[Press-News.org] Medicare: Barrier to hospice increases hospitalization