counter customizable free hit
 
Black Cancer Patients less likely than Whites to receive the End-of-Life Care they prefer
 
 


Home
Up
Advance Directives
Assisted Suicide Debate
Better Care Needed
Better Palliative Care
Blacks, End-of-Life Care
Cancer, Palliative Care
Chemo Guidelines End-of-Life
Church Directives
Computer Predictions
Counseling, Coping
Boomers' Proxy
Children at Services
Comatose Nerve Tests
Comfort before Death
Cremation Tips
Dealing with Loss
Deaths Cut
death_and_dying.htm
Death with Dignity
Defining End of Life
Dementia Palliative Care
Depression kills
Depression Impact
Docs Legal Confusion
Doctor's Role
Drs., End-of-Life
Dying at Homes
Dying from Dementia
Dying Editorial
Dying Wish
Easter Seal Program
Edwards Honored
End-of-Life Decisions
End-of-Life Guide
End-of-Life Healthcare
End-of-Life Info
End-of-Life Rationing
End-of-Life Tips
Exnpensive Hospitals
Failing to care for dying
Fear of Death
Fewer ER Visits
Fewer Hospice Patients
Final Conversations
Final Wishes
Finding Pills for Dying
Five Wishes Directive
Float Boosts Transplants
Funeral Rationale
Funeral's Role
Give Gift of Life
Healing Grief
Health Literacy Mortality Link
Holiday Grief
Hospice Role
How Long to Grieve
Hospital Death Costs
Improve Care for Dying
Intensive Care
Intensive End-of-Life Care
Japan End-of-Life
Lack of Care Concern
Life Expectancy Up
Lifesaving Care
Life Support Decisions
Living Wills
Livng with the Dying
Loss at the Holidays
Low Income Health Risks
Low Testosterone, Early Death
Lung Donor Pool
Making Final Plans
Make Wishes Known
Major Death Causes
Make Living Will
Misery, Death Link
Living Will Guide
Medications Denied
Minority Organ Donations
More Grief Study Needed
Mourning Spouse Death
Music in Hospice
New Grief Book
Nursing Homes, Hospice
Obituary Photo Bias
Organ Donation
Organ Donation Info
Organ Donations
Organ Donation Gap
Organ Donations
Organ Donation Policy
Organ Preservation
Outreach Helps
PA Law Defines Process
Palliative Care Grant
Palliative Care Interest
Palliative Sedation Checklist
Physician Assisted Death
Predicting Mortality
Preferences Remain
Primates Mourning
Quality Tips
Races Differ on Choice
Race Perspectives
Religious Coping
Rich Die Differently
Sedation Use Growing
Spousal Death Effect
Standards for Care
Studying Mourning
Terminal Drugs
Transplants after Death
Transplants Urged
Transplant Cancer Risk
Treatment Changes
Unwelcome Opinions
Weight and Mortality
When Living Will Fails
Who Makes Decision
Work Through Grief
2004 Death Statistics
7 Point System

Home
120 Year Life?
Aging Mechanism
57-Year-Old New Mom
Aging Study
AARP 37th Million
AARP Women's Foundation
Active Aging Week
Aging Boomers
Anti-Aging Products
Aging Center
Aging &Environment
Age in Place Homes
Aging Series
Aging in Place Tips
Aging by the Numbers
Aging, Cognition
Aging, Entrepreneurship
Aging in Place
Aging Causes diseases
Aging, Depression
Aging in America
Aging in Place Concept
Aging in US
Aging not so bad
Aging Prison Population
Aging Well
An Aging America
Anti-Aging Products
Autoimmune Disease
Average_Age_Up
Bolden Dies at 116
Boomers' Attitudes
Boomers Coming
Boomers, Consumer Launches
Boomers Ignored
Boomers & Media
Boomer Women
Boomers as Shapers
Boomers Turn 60
Botox ads Mislead
Botox Replacement
Brain Changes Determinant
Brain Changes
Brain Fitness
Brain Functions in Aging
Brain Impact
Brain Rust
Bush a 'No-Show'
Careers in Aging
Cell Key to Aging
Census Bureau Stats
Census Figures
Centenarian Attitudes
Centenarian Faces
Chronic Disease Facts
Cognitive Test Scores
Cut Risk Factors
Debunking Skin Myths
Declines Exaggerated?
Defining Boomers
Defining Seniors Market
Delgates Named
Did You Know?
Director Johnson
Disabilities Decline
Doctor Shortage
End of Aging?
Doctors' Shortage
Elderly Driving Stories
End-of-Life
Environments for Aging
Evolution & Aging
Facial Aging
Face Changes
Facial Injections
Facial Letdown?
Falls Not Inevitable
Forrest Elected
Gene loss accelerates aging
Global Perspective
Growing Older
Happy Seniors
Harmful Substance
Harvard Research Grant
Hormones, Memory
Icons Successful Aging
Ill Effects of Anti-Aging items
Immune System Boost
Income Affects Attitude
Increased Risk
Gene Mutation Effect
Katrina Impact Elderly
Keeping Brain Sharp
Kirk Douglas & Life
Leaving a Legacy
legislators_honored.htm
Life Expectancy Change
Life Expectancy Up
Life-Giving Compounds
Lifts Popular
Living to 100
Longevity Genes
Longevity Link
Longevity Study
Lower Self Esteem
LTC Crisis
Magic in a Jar
Memory Learning
Memory Like Machine
Menopause Tips
Mental Exercise
Mice Hold Aging Clues
Missouri Senior Info
NCOA Statement
New Aging Center
New  Tricks, Old Dogs
New Vision of Aging
NIH Brain Health
Normal Temperature
Older Americans 2005
Older Americans 2007
Older American Stats
Older, Not Wiser
Oldest Mouse
Out of Control
PA Housing
Pain-Free Aging
Older Adults Can Focus
Perspective Memory
Plasma Skin
Keeping Brain Young
Polio Survivors Aging
Population Changes
Preparation Important
Preventing Age Spots
Prevent Age Disabilities
Profiling Boomers
Redefining Aging
Religion, Older Women
Retirement, Mortality
Reverse Mental Decline
Science of Aging
Senator Byrd Speaks Out
Seniors' Concerns
Seniors Moving
Sharp Older Brains
Sleep, Aging
Senior-Friendly
Sharp Memory
Skin Perceptions
Sleeping Pill Risk
Joan Collins Video
Staying in Home
Staying Sharp
Stem Cell R&D Supported
Study on aging
Supplement Fails
Skin Aging
Sleep Problems
Stress & Aging
Stress, Memory Loss
Tea Anti-Aging
The Lucky Few
Thoughts on Aging
Tips on Aging Well
Trends Study
Uneven Facial Aging
Uric Acid Link
US Aging Trends
Veins Stiffen
Videos on Aging
Ways We Age
We're Living Longer
Women & Aging
World is Older
We're Growing Older
Who Are the Boomers?
Winter Drys Skin
World Challenges
Worry Harmful
2006 Older Americans Month
Working Memory
Wrong Stereotypes
Zen Role
Zimmers
50-Year Study
60-Year-Old Gives Birth
90 Tips to 90
2008 Older Americans
2010 Seniors' Facts

 

 

 



Google
 

 

Web TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com
 

AddThis Feed Button   Now, keep up to date with daily feeds of newly posted stories about America's Seniors...click on the box to the left 

Black Cancer Patients less likely than Whites to receive the End-of-Life Care they prefer

 

Newswise — A new study of racial disparities in end-of-life (EOL) care revealed that black cancer patients’ treatment preferences were less likely to be observed than were white patients’ preferences, according to researchers from Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.

Some black patients who had opted not to be resuscitated or put on a ventilator in a life-or-death crisis received the treatment anyway, and died in an intensive care unit.

Conversely, white patients who had expressed a preference for aggressive care in end-of-life discussions with a doctor were three times more likely to receive it than were black patients who had voiced the same wishes.

“End-of-life care discussions appeared to be more effective in ensuring that white patients’ treatment preferences were honored,” said Holly Prigerson, PhD, senior author of the report in The Journal of Clinical Oncology.

The study is posted on the journal’s web site and will be published in a future print edition.

“We are not saying that black treatment preferences were ignored,” she emphasized.

“Black patients did want, and did receive, more aggressive care than whites. The disparity was in the effect of treatment preferences on care received – not that black preferences didn’t matter.”

The study, which Prigerson and colleagues undertook to explore previously reported racial disparities in end-of-life care, such as the use of hospice and desire to undergo intensive treatments in hope of prolonging life.

“None of the white patients who reported the completion of a do-not-resuscitate order, or a DNR, order at baseline subsequently received intensive care in the last week of life,” said Prigerson.

“This did not prove to be the case for black patients. DNR orders did not significantly protect black patients from intensive end-of-life care in this study.”

She said the black-white disparity in adherence to advance directives may be linked to gaps in communication, some of which resulted from discontinuities in care that may have been more prevalent in the treatment of black patients.

For example, the researchers identified a few instances where DNR orders completed for black patients fell through the cracks because their informal caregivers (friend or family member) changed over the course of their illness, or because a critically ill patient was treated at a different hospital from the one that normally provided their care.

In such cases where documentation was lacking, doctors forced into quick decisions felt obligated to do everything possible for the patient, even if the situation seemed hopeless, said Prigerson.

The researchers, including lead author Elizabeth Trice Loggers, MD, of Dana-Farber and scientists at several other institutions, interviewed 234 white and 68 black patients with advanced cancer.

The initial interview included questions about the patients’ preference for end-of-life care; the level of trust in their physicians; whether they had had an end-of-life care discussion with a doctor; and whether they had completed a DNR order. The patients’ informal caregivers were interviewed separately.

Each patient was monitored until their death, which on average was 3.5 months later.

A patient was considered to have received intensive end-of-life care if he or she had undergone cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and/or been placed on a ventilator in the last week of life, followed by death in an intensive care unit (ICU).

Based on the initial interviews, black and white patients were similar in their trust of their physicians and having had an end-of-life discussion with the doctor.

Blacks tended to prefer intensive end-of-life care, were less likely to report that a DNR order was completed for them, and much more likely to be “positive religious copers” – believing that their outcome would ultimately be determined by God.

None of these factors, the scientists said, explained black-white disparities in end-of-life care.

Instead, it appears that “social forces,” such as disruptions in continuity of care and cultural differences that impaired patient-physician communication, might be to blame.

Prigerson said the study’s findings highlight the need to improve clinical communication between black patients and their oncology care providers.

 Enhanced communication would help to ensure that patients appreciate the risks and benefits of intensive care and that the providers are better informed of their patients’ wishes, she said.

The cases in which patients’ medical information wasn’t available in critical situations underscores the need for improvements, said Prigerson, such as a centralized medical recording system where code status could be universally accessed.

“We are continuing to analyze the data,” she added, “and we hope to identify strategies to ensure that patients and healthcare providers make informed end-of-life decisions.”

The research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health.
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (www.dana-farber.org) is a principal teaching affiliate of the Harvard Medical School and is among the leading cancer research and care centers in the United States.

It is a founding member of the Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center (DF/HCC), designated a comprehensive cancer center by the National Cancer Institute. It is the top ranked cancer center in New England, according to U.S. News & World Report, and one of the largest recipients among independent hospitals of National Cancer Institute and National Institutes of Health grant funding.

 

 

 

 

... ..
...
...

 

 

 

 



Home
Up
About Us
America's Seniors WebMall
Aging News
California Report
Caregiving
Community/Workplace
Fitness,Health
Grandparents
Health Care Policy
Hispanic Seniors
Medicare News
Prescription Drugs
Pharma Suits
Restaurant Reviews
Rural Seniors
Safety & Security
Seniors Commentary
Seniors' Entertainment
Seniors Headlines
Seniors Finances
Seniors' Issues
Seniors Relationships
Seniors Rights
Social Security News
The Virtual Family
Travel News
TSN Radio on Web
Veterans' Tribute
White House Cards
Privacy Policy
Consumer Alert
Pull Plug Heat Costs

 

 

 To Contact Us, Click here
Copyright (C) 1999-2010 TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com