Across the world today, population aging is occurring at an unprecedented rate; the most rapidly growing are those aged 80 and over. This demographic trend highlights the growing demand of health care for the elderly and a corresponding need to examine international end-of-life care practices in order to inform the provision of best quality of care for this segment of the population. End-of-life care accounts for a substantial proportion of health care expenditures - up to 25% of public healthcare funding - in many countries, although age per se may be a relatively minor determinant of costs of care at the end of life. End-of-life care as a distinct goal or practice of medicine is a relatively new concept. In the past century, the shift away from acute infectious diseases as the major cause of worldwide death, towards more complex chronic diseases, led increasingly to the development of palliative and hospice care. Currently there is wide global variation in capacity for such care, including location of death, availability of formal palliative and hospice care in both acute care settings and at home. There is also large variation in the roles of decision makers (patients, families, healthcare professionals) and the use of advance care planning and directives to inform such care, seemingly influenced by ethnicity, race and religion of individuals, and regions. Occasionally, this variation leads to conflict in decision making; very few countries have evolved formal resolution options that involve patients, families, healthcare providers, bioethicists, and legal or quasilegal bodies. Despite such variation, evidence suggests that care providers from various parts of the world encounter similar challenges in the provision of end-of-life care. Examining international variation in end-of-life care provides examples of differing levels of systems performance that can inform end-of-life care quality improvement initiatives for all systems.
CITATION STYLE
Hammer, M., Melberg, H. O., & Fowler, R. (2016). Medical Practice Variations in End-of-Life Care. In Medical Practice Variations (pp. 199–211). Springer US. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4899-7603-1_79
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