For the last 20 years, the
Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice—it’s added a few
words to its name over time—has produced the “Dartmouth Atlas,” a compendium of
information about the American health care system, principally culled from Medicare
data. Some people are highly critical of the Atlas because it analyzes health
care resource utilization (including hospital, ICU, SNF, physician visits,
medications, procedures) in the last six months or the last two years of
life—which requires starting with the time of death and looking backwards. The
problem with this approach is that we don’t know in advance who’s going to die
when, at least not with any degree of certainty. It’s easy to use the
retrospectoscope and say that a patient shouldn’t have spent so much time in
the ICU or gotten a feeding tube, given that he was going to die soon. But the
intent of sending him to the ICU or putting in the tube was to enable him to
live longer, or at least better, and it wasn’t so clear up front that the
endeavor would fail.
The critics have a legitimate
gripe, but I confess that for all its faults, I love the Dartmouth Atlas. I’m
fascinated by its principal finding, which is that whenever you look at
“preference-sensitive care,” at areas of medical treatment where there is no unequivocally
right answer for what to do, what happens to patients varies enormously across
the country. And while some kinds of care track together—in Portland, Oregon,
patients spend less than the national average number of days in the hospital
and in the ICU and more days enrolled in hospice, whereas in New York City,
they spend a higher than average number of days in the hospital and the ICU and
fewer days enrolled in hospice—the data are full of surprises. Given my general
level of enthusiasm for all the reports that come out of the Dartmouth Atlas
project, I was very happy to discover, by chance, I might add, that
a new report was released just last week, “Our Parents, Ourselves: Health Carefor an Aging Population.”
Much of what’s in this report
covers familiar ground. It summarizes the data on the average number of days
that older patients spend in the hospital in the last six months of life, it
talks about where people die, and reviews how much, or rather how little, time
they spend enrolled in hospice. But some of what’s here is new, or at least
presented in a different way, and it’s enlightening.
Because the focus of the new
report is on the older patient’s experience of the health care system—which
incidentally is what the book I’m writing is about—the authors have come up
with a few ways of quantifying that experience. They define a new measure, the
average number of “contact days,” by which they mean the total amount of time a
person interacts in some way with American medical care, the number of days
they have a doctor’s appointment, the number of days they go for a test or a
procedure, and the number of days they are inpatients in a hospital or a
skilled nursing facility.
I’m not entirely satisfied with a measure that counts
a day on which you have a doctor’s appointment or a test as a full day rather
than attempting to add up the number of hours you actually spend going to the
office, waiting, being seen, and coming home and translating that number into a
fraction of a day, but it’s a good first step at measuring the intensity of
exposure to the health care system. For what it’s worth, the average number of “contact
days” in 2012 was 17, but in certain
areas, such as Long Island, New York, it was 25.
Other useful sections of the
report address “areas needing improvement” and “areas where we have made
progress.” The list of areas needing improvement starts with screening for
prostate cancer in men over 75 (we shouldn’t be ordering PSA tests for this
group but 20% of older men get them overall and 30% of men in Miami get them).
Similarly, there’s screening for breast cancer in women over 75. That’s an area
that’s more controversial since its utility depends on life expectancy and there
are plenty of 75 year old women who will live another 10 or 15 years and thus may
benefit from screening.
Then there’s late referral to hospice: as many as 27.3%
of the residents of Fort Lauderdale who die in hospice were enrolled in the
last 3 days of life, way too late to reap much benefit. Next comes feeding
tubes in patients with advanced dementia, a subject near and dear to my heart
since I’ve written quite a bit about it. It’s still the case, or it was in
2012, that 6% of people who die with dementia got a feeding tube in the
preceding 6 months—though this happens less than 2% of the time in Portland, Oregon
and as much as 12.8% of the time in Los Angeles.
Finally, there’s the old
favorite, days spent in an ICU in the last 6 months of life. Interestingly, the
situation here has gotten worse, if you assume that the time in spent in an ICU
before death is very uncomfortable and not at all beneficial. How much time
people spend in an ICU is also tremendously variable, ranging from 1 day to 9
days, with La Crosse, Wisconsin at the low end of the spectrum and Miami and LA
at the upper end.
And then there are the areas
where we’ve made progress, according to the report. There is less use of high
risk medications, there is more widespread monitoring of diabetics, there has been
a decline in preventable hospital admissions, and there’s been a decrease,
albeit slight, in readmissions to the hospital within 30 days of discharge.
Finally, the opportunities for coordination of care and for advance care
planning, which for some reason are lumped together, have increased.
What’s missing from the
report is a compelling explanation of why the things that have improved have
gotten better and why those that haven’t improved are still problematic—and why
there’s so much variability in what happens where. The authors argue that there
are different factors at work: there’s less use of high risk medications
because one of the bad actors (propoxyphene, or Darvon) was taken off the
market; and there are fewer readmissions because there’s better discharge
planning. But Darvon was taken off the market in all 50 states and the rate of
use of so-called high risk medications varies between 10% and 30%, depending on
geography. Why? The national average for readmissions fell (though not terribly
dramatically) between 2008 and 2012, but why did it fall for some hospitals and
not others? If we know how to prevent readmissions, at least some of them, why
doesn’t everybody do it?
I guess I still need to write that book.
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