PREFERENCES OF PHYSICIANS AND THEIR PATIENTS FOR END-OF-LIFE CARE

Citation
Gp. Gramelspacher et al., PREFERENCES OF PHYSICIANS AND THEIR PATIENTS FOR END-OF-LIFE CARE, Journal of general internal medicine, 12(6), 1997, pp. 346-351
Citations number
33
Categorie Soggetti
Medicine, General & Internal
ISSN journal
08848734
Volume
12
Issue
6
Year of publication
1997
Pages
346 - 351
Database
ISI
SICI code
0884-8734(1997)12:6<346:POPATP>2.0.ZU;2-1
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Both physicians and patients view advance directives as imp ortant, yet discussions occur infrequently. We assessed differences an d correlations between physicians' and their patients' desires for end -of-life care for themselves, MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Study phy sicians (n = 78) were residents and faculty practicing in an inner-cit y, academic primary care general internal medicine practice, Patients (n = 831) received primary care from these physicians and were either at least 75 or between 50 and 74 years of age, with selected morbid co nditions. Physicians and patients completed identical questionnaires t hat included an assessment of their preferences for six specific treat ments if they were terminally ill, There were significant differences between physicians' and patients' preferences for all six treatments ( p < .0001), with physicians wanting less treatment than their patients for five of them, Patients desiring more care (p < .01) were more oft en male (odds ratio [OR] 1.7), African-American (OR 1.6), and older (O R 1.02 per year). There were no such correlates with physicians' prefe rences. A treatment preference score was calculated from respondents' desires to receive or refuse the six treatments, Physicians' scores we re highly correlated with those of their enrolled primary care patient s (r = .51, p < .0001). CONCLUSIONS: Although patients and physicians as groups differ substantially in their preferences for end-of-life ca re, there was significant correlation between individual academic phys icians' preferences and those of their primary care patients. Reasons for this correlation are unknown.