Economics at the end of life: hospital and ICU perspectives. [Review] - 2012

Not all feasible care is desirable care. At the end of life, aggressive interventions may not only be futile but also inappropriate because they may impair the quality of the remaining life for both the patient and the caregiver. Although it is challenging to identify patients with a poor prognosis, certain terminal conditions among the elderly, such as end-stage dementia, heart failure, and metastatic cancer, demand a more measured use of aggressive care. Frank discussions with patients and family about their desires in the context of the prognosis, as well as symptom support, can yield both economic savings and better quality of life. Thieme Medical Publishers 333 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY 10001, USA.


English

1069-3424


*Hospitalization/ec [Economics]
*Intensive Care/ec [Economics]
*Palliative Care/ec [Economics]
*Terminal Care/ec [Economics]
Aged
Decision Making
Dementia/ec [Economics]
Heart Failure/ec [Economics]
Hospitalization/sn [Statistics & Numerical Data]
Humans
Intensive Care/sn [Statistics & Numerical Data]
Neoplasms/ec [Economics]
Physician-Patient Relations
Prognosis
Quality of Life
Terminal Care/es [Ethics]


MedStar Washington Hospital Center


Medicine/Pulmonary-Critical Care


Journal Article
Review