Weighing Medical Costs of End-of-Life Care

Posted by Kendall Harmon

The Ronald Reagan U.C.L.A. Medical Center, one of the nation’s most highly regarded academic hospitals, has earned a reputation as a place where doctors will go to virtually any length and expense to try to save a patient’s life.

“If you come into this hospital, we’re not going to let you die,” said Dr. David T. Feinberg, the hospital system’s chief executive.

Yet that ethos has made the medical center a prime target for critics in the Obama administration and elsewhere who talk about how much money the nation wastes on needless tests and futile procedures. They like to note that U.C.L.A. is perennially near the top of widely cited data, compiled by researchers at Dartmouth, ranking medical centers that spend the most on end-of-life care but seem to have no better results than hospitals spending much less.

Listening to the critics, Dr. J. Thomas Rosenthal, the chief medical officer of the U.C.L.A. Health System, says his hospital has started re-examining its high-intensity approach to medicine. But the more U.C.L.A.’s doctors study the issue, the more they recognize a difficult truth: It can be hard, sometimes impossible, to know which critically ill patients will benefit and which will not.

Read it all

Filed under: * Culture-WatchAging / the ElderlyHealth & Medicine--The 2009 American Health Care Reform Debate* TheologyEthics / Moral TheologyPastoral Theology

0 Comments
Posted December 23, 2009 at 11:27 am [Printer Friendly] [Print w/ comments]
Registered members must log in to comment.




Next entry (above): In Scotland Church hopes its special ale will get pub regulars into Christmas spirit

Previous entry (below): Mitch Albom Wants You To ‘Have A Little Faith’

Return to blog homepage

Return to Mobile view (headlines)