
Doctors
still deny older patients tests and treatment
Newswise — Doctors are still
denying older people the sorts of tests and
treatment they would offer to younger patients,
reveals a survey in Quality and Safety in Health
Care.
Half of those surveyed were
influenced by a patient’s age in their decisions on
whether to send a patient for tests or prescribe
treatment. Patients over 65 were managed differently
from those who were younger.
The findings are based on a
survey of almost 90 general practitioners,
specialists in care of the elderly, and
cardiologists from across Southern England and the
Midlands.
Participants were specifically
quizzed about their intended management of 72
fictional patients with angina, using a specially
devised computer programme, and face to face
structured interviews.
The fictional patients were all
aged between 45 and 92, with varying degrees of
severity of heart problems. Head and shoulders
photographs of people who had agreed to be the
fictional patients were also provided.
Overall, older patients were
less likely to be referred to a cardiologist and
given an angiogram or exercise tolerance tests as
middle aged patients. They were also less likely to
be given revascularisation (opening up of blood
vessels).
But they were significantly
more likely to have their medication changed and
told to come back at a later date..
Half of the doctors in each of
the three professional groups treated older patients
differently. Those who were influenced by a
patient’s age were on average five years older then
those who were not.
The face to face interviews
revealed various reasons for differences in
treatment, some of which related to patients’
wishes, potential complications of treatment and the
frailty of the individual concerned.
Two doctors deliberately
dissociated the influence of these factors from that
of old age.
One doctor commented: “I’d like
to think that I would treat the individual. I think
generally you have to try and identify from an
individual what is in their best interests. I don’t
think bypass surgery in an 87 year old is in their
interests.”