Doctor-patient talk could cut costs, ethicists say
(CNN) — Neither of Dr. Arthur Kellerman’s parents wanted to die in a hospital. His father had metastatic cancer and his mother had had multiple strokes, and Kellerman wanted to respect their wishes about the ends of their lives.
“Both of them could have ended up dying in a hospital having run up bills of tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars,” said Kellerman, chairman of the department of emergency medicine at Emory University. “Neither of them wanted that, and I fought like hell to keep that from happening.”
As politicians on Capitol Hill debate reforming the health care system, doctors and ethicists say there could easily be tremendous cost savings if doctors and family members had more conversations about end-of-life issues.
A March 2009 study in the Archives of Internal Medicine suggested that more than $76 million per year could be saved if half of the people who die from cancer annually had end-of-life conversations with their doctors. In the authors’ sample, patients who reported having those talks had 36 percent lower health care costs in the final week of life. Read the entire article on cnn.com
August 22nd, 2009 at 9:44 pm
ajypisybyla
5th Grade Taks Test Practice
April 20th, 2010 at 11:11 am
Ну так себе…
Менеджер технолог By Elizabeth Landau
(CNN) — Neither of Dr. Arthur Kellerman’s parents wanted to die in a hospital..
May 3rd, 2010 at 7:20 pm
Дамс в большинстве случаев оно так и есть!
водитель с личным легковым а/м By Elizabeth Landau
(CNN) — Neither of Dr. Arthur Kellerman’s parents wanted to die in a hospital..