The United Kingdom is, in many respects,
ahead of the United States in its approach to both geriatrics and palliative
care. Cicely Saunders established the first modern hospice in London in 1967;
the US did not open its first hospice until 1974, after Florence Wald spent a
year at the St. Christopher’s Hospice in England to study under Saunders.
While the US boasts that Dr. Ignatz Nascher—himself an immigrant from Austria—coined
the term “geriatrics in 1911, Nascher is not exactly a stellar role model. He
wrote in his textbook, “Geriatrics: Diseases of Old Age and their Treatment,”
that “We realize that for all practical purposes the lives of the aged are
useless, that they are often a burden to themselves, their family and the
community at large. Their appearance is generally unesthetic, their actions
objectionable, their very existence often an incubus to those who in a spirit
of humanity or duty take upon themselves the care of the aged.” Far more
attractive a founding figure is Britain’s Marjory Warren, who created the first
geriatric units in English hospitals in the 1940 and whose work led the
National Health Service to recognize geriatrics as a specialty in 1947. The US
medical establishment only came to see geriatrics as worthy of recognition four
decades later—and instead of awarding the field specialty status, chose
starting in 1988 to allow physicians to receive a “Certificate of Added
Qualifications in Geriatrics,” something less than full-fledged accreditation.
The gap between the UK and the US remains to this day. So when the British
report a study of the factors associated with whether people die in hospital or
at home, it’s worth heeding their findings.
In both England and the US, most people who
are asked where they would prefer to die say they want to be at home. Where
people actually die is quite different. In England, 58 percent of people die in
hospital and 18 percent at home. In the US in 2007, 24 percent of people
over 65 died at home, up from 15 percent
in 1989. The main change in the last decade, however, has been an increase in
deaths in the nursing home: hospital deaths went from 38 percent to 35 percent,
but nursing home deaths from 5 to 28 percent.
But England tried to do something about the
discrepancy. England adopted the “End of Life Care Strategy” in 2008 to improve
care in the final year of life and to prioritize home over hospital care. The new study examines what happened to patients dying of respiratory disease
between 2001 and 2014. What they found
was that among the 334,520 people who died of chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease and the 45,712 who died of interstitial lung disease, hospital death
fell by 6 and 3 percent, respectively, after the introduction of the End of
Life Strategy. In the several years before the strategy was initiated, the
proportion of pulmonary deaths occurring in the hospital had remained
constant. But the improvements were
wiped out for people who had multiple co-morbid conditions. And living in a
city, especially London, lower socioeconomic status, and being married, also
increased the likelihood of dying in the hospital.
Another study, this one from Belgium, may
shed some light on why it was so hard to enable people with chronic respiratory
conditions, assorted co-morbidities, and limited resources out of the hospital.
This study
of family physicians, nurses, and family caregivers used focus groups and
semi-structured interviews to figure out the pluses and minuses of hospital
care. They identified the usual weaknesses of the hospital: inadequate
expertise in symptom management, an excessive focus on curative care or on
life-prolongation, and poor communication. But they also revealed that for many
people, the acute hospital is a safe haven. It is a place that offers hope even
to people who acknowledge that they are terminally ill. It provides continuous
support and peace of mind. And it is a place of last resort for people whose
families are having difficulty caring for them at home.
As my colleague Jim Sabin and I
argued a few years ago in our paper “No Place Like the Hospital,” what people say they want (ie to die at home) when they are perfectly healthy
may be quite different from what they actually want when they are seriously ill
and imminently dying. It’s not surprising that the more complicated their
medical problems and the more constrained their financial and familial
resources, the more attractive the hospital seems. But with the growth of
inpatient palliative care consultative services—67 per cent of American hospitals now boast such a program —in-hospital
care is improving. The findings of the Belgian study, with inadequate pain
management, poor communication, and excessive attention to life-prolonging
therapy, are no longer universally applicable.
To improve care at the very end of
life, we need to do a better job in both the home and the hospital setting. In
both cases, what is needed is a potent injection of palliative care expertise. If
care is in the hospital, the family physicians, specialists, and nurses
providing treatment should be advised by palliative care specialists. If care
is in the home, family caregivers should have the support and resources of a
sophisticated palliative care team. The issue is not so much moving care from
one site to another as optimizing care in each location.
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