Accreditation

Study: More healthcare not necessarily better

Accreditation Connection, April 18, 2008

A recent study shows that providing seniors less intense healthcare in the last two years of their lives does not necessarily lead to better outcomes. The study also found that the level of care a patient receives depends greatly on how medicine is practiced in their geographical area.

The study looked three decades of evidence analyzing Medicare spending and procedures across the country. For example, the report found that Medicare patients in Los Angeles receive more medical care in the last two years of life than patients anywhere else in the country, but found no conclusive evidence that the amount of care provided for better overall outcomes.

Skeptics of the report point to the fact the report does not take into account patients who may have lived longer because of aggressive care.

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