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Life & Times

Palliative care is increasing, but curative care is growing even faster in the last months of life

Scott Murray and Jordi Amblàs
British Journal of General Practice 2021; 71 (710): 410-411. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3399/bjgp21X716921
Scott Murray
GP, Emeritus Professor of Primary Palliative care, Edinburgh University, Edinburgh, Scotland. Email: @scottamurrayed
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  • For correspondence: Scott.Murray@ed.ac.uk
Jordi Amblàs
Geriatrician, Central Catalonia Chronicity Research Group; Chair of Palliative Care, Faculty of Medicine, University of Vic-Central University of Catalonia, Vic, Spain.@jordiamblas
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The introduction of early palliative care might be hoped to moderate the medicalisation of dying and the increasingly frequent medical and surgical treatment that patients generally receive in the last months of life.

Indeed the old concept of an abrupt change from curative to palliative care when a person is terminally ill and imminently dying is giving way gradually to the better concept of a phased introduction of palliative care from diagnosis of a life-threatening illness, as advocated in Figure 1.1

Figure 1.
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Figure 1.

Contrasting the old concept of curative care being suddenly replaced by palliative care to a gradual introduction of palliative care from diagnosis of any life-threatening illness.

DISEASE MODIFYING OR POTENTIALLY CURATIVE CARE INCREASE RAPIDLY IN THE LAST MONTHS OF LIFE

By 2018, GPs in Scotland recognised 69% of their patients for a palliative care approach by the time they died, calling it ‘anticipatory care’. This ‘primary palliative care’ was associated with more frequent care planning, more patients dying in their place of choice, and less hospital admissions.2

However, while integrated palliative care delivery is gradually increasing throughout the last year of life, disease modifying and potentially curative care and unplanned care is not decreasing. It is instead increasing greatly, especially in the last 3 months of life.

Ninety-five percent of patients in their last year of life receive emergency and unscheduled care.3 Planned primary and hospital care for disease management also rise steeply in the last trimester in England and Canada.4,5

Figure 2 illustrates this by plotting the monthly frequency of medical service episodes that patients receive in their last year of life. This reveals the great increase in the number of episodes of ‘curative’ care as death approaches. This is hidden in Figure 1, which only shows the increasing percentage of people receiving a palliative care approach.

Figure 2.
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Figure 2.

Overview of the monthly total frequency of medical service episodes patients receive in their last year of life.

So palliative care is reaching more people with cancer, organ failure, frailty, and dementia, and starting earlier, but planned and emergency medical care continues to expand even more both in hospitals and in primary care.

Why is this? Who is responsible for this, and whose job is it to address this issue? Palliative care specialists bemoan that their specialty is stigmatised, and referrals come late if at all. But they never consider they have a public health duty to address this issue of overzealous treatment of the population who are dying.

OVER-MEDICALISATION OF DEATH

Is it patients demanding more treatments than might be wise, hoping against hope for a cure? Is it hospital doctors doing what they can do and know how to do, rather than should do? Is it lack of effective care planning and communication between all settings? Is it the decrease in continuity of care, especially out-of-hours?

Compared to countries where curative care is not available to some patients at all due to lack of resources, inappropriate and sometimes very costly care is especially wrong and inequitable. The theoretical concept of early palliative care for all in the community is gaining ground slowly in practice in all World Health Organization regions, and there is no doubt that it can decrease emergency care and hospital admissions when care planning is in place and has been communicated between all settings.6

However, the deep-seated overmedicalisation of death must be addressed. Much of this care in retrospect is clearly futile, and quality indicators for appropriate and inappropriate end-of-life care in people with Alzheimer’s disease, cancer, or chronic obstructive pulmonary have been identified to assess this further.7

Low-value, high-cost care can cause much suffering. An early palliative approach can prevent or ameliorate suffering and must be an informed option and available for all. Primary care may be best placed to take this forward.

Figure

Footnotes

  • This article was first posted on BJGP Life on 15 Jul 2021; https://bjgplife.com/curative

  • © British Journal of General Practice 2021

REFERENCES

  1. 1.↵
    1. Murray SA,
    2. Kendall M,
    3. Boyd K,
    4. Sheikh A
    (2005) Illness trajectories and palliative care. BMJ 330, 7498, 1007–1011.
    OpenUrlFREE Full Text
  2. 2.↵
    1. Finucane AM,
    2. Davydaitis D,
    3. Horseman Z,
    4. et al.
    (2020) Electronic care coordination systems for people with advanced progressive illness: a mixed-methods evaluation in Scottish primary care. Br J Gen Pract, DOI: https://doi.org/10.3399/bjgp19X707117.
  3. 3.↵
    1. Mason B,
    2. Kerssens JJ,
    3. Stoddart A,
    4. et al.
    (2020) Unscheduled and out-of-hours care for people in their last year of life: a retrospective cohort analysis of national datasets. BMJ Open 10, 11, e041888.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  4. 4.↵
    1. Diernberger K,
    2. Luta X,
    3. Bowden J,
    4. et al.
    (2021) Healthcare use and costs in the last year of life: a national population data linkage study. BMJ Support Palliat Care doi:10.1136/bmjspcare-2020-002708.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  5. 5.↵
    1. Howard M,
    2. Hafid A,
    3. Isenberg SR,
    4. et al.
    (2021) Intensity of outpatient physician care in the last year of life: a population-based retrospective descriptive study. CMAJ Open 9, 2, E613–E622.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  6. 6.↵
    1. World Health Organization
    (2018) Integrating palliative care and symptom relief into primary health care. A WHO guide for planners, implementers and managers. https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/integrating-palliative-careand-symptom-relief-into-primary-health-care (accessed 5 Aug 2021).
  7. 7.↵
    1. De Schreye R,
    2. Houttekier D,
    3. Deliens L,
    4. Cohen J
    (2017) Developing indicators of appropriate and inappropriate end-of-life care in people with Alzheimer’s disease, cancer or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease for population-level administrative databases: a RAND/UCLA appropriateness study. Palliat Med 31, 10, 932–945.
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
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British Journal of General Practice: 71 (710)
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September 2021
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Palliative care is increasing, but curative care is growing even faster in the last months of life
Scott Murray, Jordi Amblàs
British Journal of General Practice 2021; 71 (710): 410-411. DOI: 10.3399/bjgp21X716921

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Palliative care is increasing, but curative care is growing even faster in the last months of life
Scott Murray, Jordi Amblàs
British Journal of General Practice 2021; 71 (710): 410-411. DOI: 10.3399/bjgp21X716921
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