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Physicians Routinely Fail to Communicate with Dying Patients on End-of-Life Issues

Posted: Friday, February 05, 2010

Most doctors don't talk about end-of-life issues with their cancer patients when those patients are feeling well, a new survey has found. Nor do they talk about them until treatments have been exhausted. Those delays mean patients might not be able to make truly informed choices early in their treatment.

The study, published online January 11, 2010, in the journal Cancer, surveyed 4,188 physicians about how they would talk to a hypothetical cancer patient with four to six months to live. A majority of respondents (65 percent) said they would discuss prognosis, but only a minority said they would discuss do-not-resuscitate status (44 percent), hospice (26 percent) or preferred site of death (21 percent) at that time. Rather, they would wait until symptoms were present or until there were no more treatments to offer.

Current guidelines, from the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, a not-for-profit alliance of 21 of the world's leading cancer centers, say that such conversations should be initiated whenever a patient has been given less than a year to live, if not at diagnosis. Doctors gave various reasons for not following the guidelines. Some didn't want to dash patients' hopes; some wanted to continue treating patients. In addition, said lead author Dr. Nancy Keating of Harvard Medical School: "There's at least some evidence to suggest that patients don't want to hear about these things."

Source: Los Angeles Times (January 25, 2010)

From the NAELA eBulletin January 26, 2010 -- A weekly newsletter by Professor Kim Dayton, David McGuffey, CELA, and Rajiv Nagaich. The eBulletinis published by the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys and is a benefit of NAELA membership.

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