Journal of palliative medicine
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Many proponents of hospice care believe that this service is underutilized. ⋯ Our study-the first major survey of physician attitudes and practices regarding hospice utilization in an HMO setting-showed that barriers to hospice referral are similar to those in non-HMO settings; physicians have difficulty predicting life expectancy and lack knowledge of patient eligibility guidelines. Physician concern that patients or their family members would construe hospice referral as a cost-saving technique may be a barrier particularly troublesome in an HMO setting.
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The aim of this study was to compare the prevalence of family-reported pain or distress during the last week of decedents' lives during two times: November 1996 to December 1997 and June 2000 to March 2002. We telephone-surveyed family caregivers of Oregonians who had died 2 to 5 months previously in private homes, nursing homes, and other community-based settings. Caregivers were asked to rate the level of pain or distress during the decedent's final week of life on a four-point scale. ⋯ Time 1, odds ratio [OR] 2.09, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.59-2.74). We discuss possible explanations for this finding, including media effect created by the publicity surrounding the second ballot measure and subsequent availability of physician-assisted suicide in November 1997. Alternatively, trends in under funding and under staffing of hospice and community nursing resources may have disproportionately affected care in the final week of life, which depends heavily on skilled nursing care for effective symptom control and psychosocial support of the patient and family.
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In 1997, the Oregon Death with Dignity Act was enacted, allowing physicians to prescribe lethal dosages of medication to competent, terminally ill patients who request them. To improve our understanding of physicians' reactions to requests for assisted suicide, we performed semistructured interviews of 35 Oregon physicians who had received requests from patients. Interviews were completed in 2000, and audiotaped, transcribed, and analyzed using qualitative techniques. ⋯ Regardless of whether they prescribed or not, physicians did not express major regrets about their decisions. Requests often facilitated discussion of important issues, and many physicians felt that the process increased their confidence and assertiveness in discussing end-of-life issues with other patients. Physicians rarely sought support from colleagues; instead, they tended to discuss emotional aspects of their experiences with their spouses.