Feature

Never too late to operate? Surgery near end of life is common, costly


 


While surgery is typically lifesaving for younger people, operating on frail, older patients rarely helps them live longer or returns the quality of life they once enjoyed, according to a 2016 paper in Annals of Surgery.

The cost of these surgeries – typically paid for by Medicare, the government health insurance program for people over 65 – involve more than money, said Amber Barnato, MD, professor at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice. Older patients who undergo surgery within a year of death spent 50 percent more time in the hospital than others, and nearly twice as many days in intensive care.

And while some robust octogenarians have many years ahead of them, studies show that surgery is also common among those who are far more frail.

Eighteen percent of Medicare patients have surgery in their final month of life and 8% in their final week, according to a 2011 study in The Lancet.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Allscripts’ charges for sending, refilling prescriptions
MDedge Family Medicine
Trump administration proposes rule to loosen curbs on short-term health plans
MDedge Family Medicine
Cyberliability insurance: Should you purchase a policy?
MDedge Family Medicine
Will Indiana Medicaid work requirements pass legal muster?
MDedge Family Medicine
Evaluations of Medicaid experiments by states, CMS are weak, GAO says
MDedge Family Medicine
Maternity care: The challenge of paying for value
MDedge Family Medicine
Preoperative penicillin allergy tests could decrease SSI
MDedge Family Medicine
Supreme Court declines to hear DACA case
MDedge Family Medicine
Expert argues for improving MACRA, not scrapping it
MDedge Family Medicine
Americans support the right to affordable health care
MDedge Family Medicine