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by: Alex Smith, @alexsmithMD

The Center to Advance Palliative Care and the National Palliative Care Research Center just released their 2015 report card. Boy is there some great stuff in there!

The major point: two thirds (67%) of US hospitals with >50 beds report a palliative care program.  So is the glass two-thirds full, or one third empty?

There’s more to this question than the big picture two-thirds one-third, however. I suggest you go check out your state’s “Grade” for inpatient palliative care.  California, my home state, got a “B” as 74% of hospitals with >50 beds report a palliative care program.  Not bad.  The Northeast and Mountain regions have  palliative care in almost all hospitals.  The south, not so much…so access to inpatient palliative care may be 2/3 across the country, but in some places you’ll be hard pressed to find any palliative care at all.  Good luck finding palliative care if you get seriously ill in
Mississippi, where only 29% of hospitals have palliative care
services.

Further, if one looks at the trajectory of growth of palliative care, it seems to be slowing.  In the 2005 report card the rate was 53%, in 2005, then 63% in 2011, now 67% in 2015.  The rate has gone from almost 2% a year of growth down to 1% per year.  (some of these differences may be due to a more robust methodology in the most recent 2015 report- they actually called all hospitals and asked if they have a palliative care program, rather than relying on publicly reported data).

For profit-hospitals still lag way behind nonprofit and public hospitals in access to inpatient palliative care.  Only 23% of for profit hospitals with >50 beds report a palliative care program. That’s pathetic.  What’s the story there?  I don’t get it.  The evidence is mounting that palliative care is not only great at improving quality of life for people with serious illness and their families, it saves money.  See this recent study in the Journal of Clinical Oncology that piles more evidence on that mountain, showing that the earlier the consult in relation to admission, the greater the cost savings.  Shouldn’t the for-profit hospitals be all over this???

I think overall we can feel pretty good about the state of progress for inpatient palliative care.  As the main study authors, Diane Meier and Sean Morrison note, the greatest need is no longer on the inpatient side.  It’s in the outpatient arena, where people with serious illness spend the vast majority of time, yet access to palliative care services is rudimentary, limited to hospice, or nonexistent in most of the country.

One more thing – I love the coupling of the report with actionable policy recommendations for congress, the funders of research NIH/PCORI/CMMI/AHRQ.  My favorites:

  • Establish palliative care awards for palliative care in medicine, nursing, social work, and chaplaincy.
  • Set aside more Graduate Medical Education (GME) slots for palliative care training.
  • Establish a Center for Scientific Review (CSR) study section on serious illness.  CSR reviews grants for the NIH.

So much to read – have a look!

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