News outlets continue to explain how end-of-life care counseling works

NPR talks with Dr. David Casarett, associate professor of medicine at the University of Pennsylvania who started the palliative care service at the VA hospital in Philadelphia, about "the rhetoric around the end-of-life issues addressed in some of the proposed health care legislation" (Block, 8/18).

The Associated Press reports on a study about end-of-life counseling: "As a political uproar rages over end-of-life counseling, a new study finds offering such care to dying cancer patients improves their mood and quality of life. The study of 322 patients in rural New Hampshire and Vermont also suggests the counseling didn't discourage people from going to the hospital. The research didn't look at costs. The study's publication in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association coincides with the fight over health care overhaul proposals in Congress" (Johnson, 8/18).

CNN International defines some of the terms commonly used in the health care reform debate including end-of-life counseling (8/18).

Related KHN story: Doctors Providing End-of-Life Care See Benefit In Current Controversy


Kaiser Health NewsThis article was reprinted from khn.org with permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent news service, is a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health care policy research organization unaffiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

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