'60 Minutes' On End-Of-Life Health Spending: 'Is There A Better Way?'
Main Category: Seniors / AgingAlso Included In: Palliative Care / Hospice Care; Primary Care / General Practice; Public Health
Article Date: 24 Nov 2009 - 4:00 PST
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While all Americans will eventually die, CBS's 60 Minutes reports, it may turn some heads to find out how much the government will spend when it happens -- in 2008, about $50 billion in the last two months of life. "You might think this would be an obvious thing for Congress and the president to address as they try to reform health care. But what used to be a bipartisan issue has become a politically explosive one - a perfect example of the costs that threaten to bankrupt the country and how hard it's going to be to rein them in." Dartmouth researcher Elliot Fisher explains how as many as one-fifth of Americans end up dying costly deaths in intensive care units, saying "It's the path of least resistance." The report explains, "Fisher says it is more efficient for doctors to manage patients who are seriously ill in a hospital situation, and there are other incentives that affect the cost and the care patients receive. Among them: the fact that most doctors get paid based on the number of patients that they see, and most hospitals get paid for the patients they admit" (Kroft, 11/22).
Related KHN story: Crusading Professor Challenges Dartmouth Atlas On Claims Of Wasteful Health Care (Rau, 11/16).
This information was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at kaiserhealthnews.org.
© Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.
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