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Background: Palliative care is received by a small number of patients with terminal illness, most of them with cancer.
Methods: Data are reviewed and evaluated that relate to the barriers and problems that limit access of patients to appropriate palliative and/or hospice
care.
Results: Palliative care generally is not well integrated into the health care system. Access is limited, and many health care professionals and laypeople are
unaware of its possible benefits. Cultural and religious barriers often apply, and problems exist in obtaining narcotics. Palliative care for patients other
than those with cancer may be especially difficult to achieve.
Conclusions: Recognizing and overcoming the barriers to the provision of palliative care can bring about changes in education, health care practices, and
administration to achieve the desired goals.
Introduction
In the United States, as in most developed countries, death is rarely unexpected. It usually occurs in older persons with chronic progressive illnesses that often are
complicated by infections or exacerbations. In most hospitalized patients, death is preceded by a "Do not resuscitate" order.[1] However, the predictability of death has
not led to effective efforts to improve the quality of death or to palliate symptoms before death. The objectives of palliative care are not to cure the underlying disease
but to relieve symptoms and to improve the quality of life and death to patients with chronic as well as terminal illnesses. Hospice care refers to care provided to
terminally ill patients who usually have a life expectancy of six months or less.
The tenets of modern palliative care have been practiced in the hospice movement for over 30 years. Although hospice care in the United States began in its modern
form in the 1970s and has been reimbursed by Medicare since 1983, only approximately one third of cancer patients receive formal hospice care, often in the last few
weeks of their illnesses.[2] Patients with other terminal illnesses (eg, progressive neurological illnesses, end-stage cardiac or pulmonary disease, and acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome [AIDS]) are even less likely to be admitted into hospices, and palliative care may be unavailable or inadequate for those outside of
hospices.
The Study to Understand Prognoses and Preferences for Outcomes and Risks of Treatments (SUPPORT) examined the care given to 9,105 patients with one of more
of nine life-threatening diagnoses (eg, nontraumatic coma, multiple organ system failure with sepsis) who were admitted to five teaching hospitals in the United States.
Phase I of the SUPPORT study, which was observational, found that dying patients often are treated aggressively, that their pain frequently is untreated or
undertreated, that advance directives may not be heeded, and that communication regarding "Do not resuscitate" and other orders often is lacking.[3] Phase II of the
SUPPORT study, which was an intervention to correct these deficiencies, demonstrated the difficulties in correcting these shortcomings in routine medical care.
Physicians in the intervention group received regularly updated probability estimates of six-month survival, outcomes of functional disability at two months, and
outcomes of cardiopulmonary resuscitation. A specially trained nurse contacted the patient, family, physician, and hospital staff to elicit patient and family preferences,
to clarify understanding of outcomes, and to improve advance care planning and communication. No improvement in care was seen with this intervention.
The lack of effective palliative care has many causes, including the lack of integration of palliative care into most health care systems, the inaccessibility of hospice care,
ignorance of methods of palliative care, difficulties in obtaining narcotics, cultural and religious beliefs of the patient and family, and the problems of providing effective
palliative care for terminal illnesses other than cancer (Table).
Lack of Integration
In today's health care system, palliative care is most widely available in the form of hospice care. Thus, aside from the limited number of hospitals with palliative care
services, formal palliative care is available only in a package that many patients and families may be unable or unwilling to accept.
A harsh view of the lack of integration of hospice care into the rest of the health care system follows: To enter a hospice, patients and families must forfeit other forms of
or access to health care, accept only palliative care, and make no attempt to prolong life. The hospice determines what forms of palliative care are appropriate,
including whether and when to admit the patient for inpatient care. Chemotherapy, radiation therapy, transfusions, and tube feedings generally are not considered
appropriate palliative care. The health care providers in the hospice may differ from those who cared for the patient before hospice admission. When the patient is
admitted for hospice care, it may be to a different hospital. When the patient is dying, the family is told to call the hospice number rather than the familiar "911" number.
This synopsis is exaggerated, and there are good reasons for many of these requirements, including the requirements of Medicare funding and the history of hospice
care in America as a protest against aggressive acute care. The overall effect, however, is to segregate hospice care from other, more familiar forms of health care and
thus add the trauma of separation at a time when both patient and family are already traumatized.
Even palliative care that is provided in an acute care hospital often is in the form of "comfort care," implying that other forms of treatment are no longer being
considered. It is a fallacy to assume a dichotomy between dying patients who should receive palliative care and all other patients who are not assumed to need
comprehensive symptom relief.[4] In some hospitals, palliative care services are available even to those who are receiving other forms of treatment. However, palliative
care as the comprehensive treatment of suffering generally is reserved for those patients who do not wish to receive other treatments.
Palliative care in the United States currently is provided by discrete organizations called hospices, by physicians caring for their patients in conjunction with palliative
care services or, in most cases, by physicians in the community who care for patients without other assistance. Integration of palliative care education into medical
school and residency training programs is needed to improve physician care and to generate appropriate hospice referrals of terminally ill patients. Such education will
promote continuity of care of terminally ill patients for the benefit of both the patients and the students. These changes in medical education will require the flexible
participation of hospices and palliative care services. In order to continue the development of palliative care services and to allow more flexibility for hospices, changes
in reimbursement mechanisms for terminal care will be necessary. Given the present aggressive nature of terminal care in many acute care hospitals, these changes may
be cost effective.
Lack of Knowledge
As a result of the lack of integration into routine medical care, health care professionals and laypeople often are unaware of the principles of palliative care - especially
of adequate pain control - and the services available in hospices. Palliative care and hospice care are not routinely available at most medical centers and thus are not
included in most residency programs. Some fellowship programs, especially in geriatric care and oncology, include training in palliative care.
Health care professionals may be concerned about addiction, sedation, and respiratory depression when using narcotics.[7-9] They may lack information on
appropriate drugs, adjuvant therapy, prevention and treatment of side effects, and alternate routes of administration. Patients and family members often have similar
concerns, especially about drug addiction. To some degree, these concerns may be the result of substance abuse programs that classify abusive drugs with drugs used
for medical purposes.
Many health care professionals are unaware of hospice operations, reimbursement mechanisms, and insurance coverage. A common misconception is that hospices are
only inpatient units where patients go to die. To combat the negative effects of this lack of information, improvements in palliative care education for medical students
and residents are needed. Palliative care training is especially important in areas such as geriatric care and oncology. In addition, a cadre of specialists in palliative care
is needed to train others. At present, few fellowship programs exist. A credential such as the Certificate of Added Qualifications that is used for those trained in geriatric
care may encourage such training.
Access to Narcotics
Adequate doses of opiates and appropriate adjuvant medications can control pain in 75% to 90% of cancer patients without undue side effects (some patients require
unusual routes of administration or complete or partial sedation to be pain-free).[10,11] A median dose of 30 mg of morphine every four hours is the norm to maintain
good pain control, while some patients require doses equivalent to thousands of milligrams of morphine daily.[12,13] Such pain control requires the availability of
narcotics in the dosage needed, but both regulatory and practical restrictions can limit patient access to such doses.
The war on drugs has resulted in a number of laws and regulatory bodies that are intended to reduce illicit drug consumption but have the unintended effect of limiting
drug availability for terminally ill patients.[14,15] For example, many states require that triplicate prescription forms be used for all prescriptions for schedule drugs or
for all schedule drugs stronger than combination drugs containing codeine or oxycodone. Many physicians do not obtain the special prescription forms, and thus their
patients with pain are limited to such combination drugs. Weak narcotics can be given in doses high enough for analgesia in patients with severe pain, but the number of
pills required and the expense would be prohibitive, as would the toxicity from aspirin or acetaminophen. Some states not only require patients using opiates for chronic
pain to register as "habitual users," but also limit the doses of medication that can be prescribed, the number of pills that can be given, or the length of time for which the
prescription is intended. Many states also limit or prohibit refills on narcotic prescriptions. The language used in state regulations may be vague or intended for illicit drug
use, and the parameters used by drug regulatory agencies to determine whether narcotics are being used appropriately often are ambiguous. These regulations
discourage the prescription of narcotics in adequate doses for the appropriate treatment of pain.
Practical difficulties can arise once the appropriate prescription is written. Many pharmacies, concerned about crime, paperwork, and regulatory oversight, either do
not carry narcotics or stock only a limited number of drugs in only a few dosage forms. Pharmacies located near or associated with cancer centers and hospices often
are better stocked. Many health maintenance organizations and government-funded hospitals restrict their patients to drugs from formularies that may be limited in the
drugs or dosage forms available.
The Wisconsin Pain Initiative is the first of several state and regional initiatives designed to educate professionals and laypeople about the appropriate use of narcotics in
pain control, to incorporate pain control into the curriculum of medical schools and residency training, and to eliminate laws and regulations that limit good pain
management.[16]
The Intractable Pain Treatment Act of Texas is an example of an attempt to change regulatory barriers by stating that controlled drugs can be used by Texas physicians
to treat their patients with intractable pain.[14] Because cultural confusion between illicit and licit use of drugs is common, similar initiatives that incorporate
professionals, professional organizations, and laypeople will almost certainly be necessary for change elsewhere.
admission requirements and the development of palliative care services that can serve those who continue to receive other treatments will make palliative care more
accessible to noncancer patients. Research is needed to determine which patients can best be treated by usual medical care, which by a combination of routine and
palliative care, and which by palliative care alone.
Conclusions
At present, most dying patients do not receive formal hospice or palliative care, and most physicians are not trained in palliative care. The separation and segregation of
palliative care from routine medical care present barriers in communication, referrals, and cross-fertilization. Integrating palliative care into routine medical settings,
improving education in palliative care for students and residents, revising admission requirements, recruiting minority staff, improving availability to appropriate medical
narcotics, and continuing research to determine which patients with illnesses other than cancer will be best served by palliative care will result in more widespread use of
palliative care services. Palliative care is necessary for the humane care of dying patients, and the barriers to patients receiving that care should be demolished.
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From the Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Tex.