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Palliative care inpatient service in a comprehensive cancer center: clinical and financial outcomes.
- Ahmed Elsayem, Kay Swint, Michael J Fisch, J Lynn Palmer, Suresh Reddy, Paul Walker, Donna Zhukovsky, Patti Knight, and Eduardo Bruera.
- Department of Palliative Care and Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, 77030, USA. aelsayem@mdanderson.org
- J. Clin. Oncol. 2004 May 15;22(10):2008-14.
PurposeInpatient palliative care units are unavailable in most cancer centers and tertiary hospitals. The purpose of this article is to review the outcomes of the first 344 admissions to the Palliative Care Inpatient Service (PCIS) at our comprehensive cancer center.Patients And MethodsWe retrospectively reviewed our computerized database for clinical and demographic information, length of stay, and hospital billing during the first year of the service's operation.ResultsThree hundred twenty patients were admitted during the study period. Their median age was 57 years. The main cancer diagnoses were thoracic or head and neck (44%), gastrointestinal (25%), and hematologic malignancy (8%). The main referral symptoms were pain (44%), nausea (41%), fatigue (39%), and dyspnea (38%). The median length of stay in the PCIS was 7 days (range, 1 to 58 days). Fifty-nine patients died while in the PCIS. However, the overall hospital mortality rate was not increased compared with that in the year before the establishment of the PCIS (3.58% v 3.59%). The mean reimbursement rate for all palliative care charges was approximately 57%, and the mean daily charges in the PCIS were 38% lower than the mean daily charges for the rest of the hospital. Symptom intensity data showed severe distress on admission and significant improvement in the main target symptoms. Most patients were discharged to a hospice.ConclusionThe PCIS has been accepted in our tertiary cancer center on the basis of its clinical utility and financial viability.
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