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May 7, 2004|Volume 32, Number 29|Two-Week Issue



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Study: For-profit hospices offer
fewer services than non-profits

Patients receiving care from for-profit hospices received a narrower range of hospice services than patients who received care from not-for-profit hospices, Yale researchers report.

"Our results suggest that more understanding of for-profit motives on patient care is warranted," says senior author Elizabeth H. Bradley, associate professor in the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health (EPH) at the School of Medicine. "This result is not a consequence of differences in patient or hospice characteristics such as diagnosis, disability, demographics or hospice location."

Bradley says hospice is increasingly being provided by for-profit organizations. She and her team examined whether profit motive affected the delivery of health care services.

The authors focused on hospice care, which is care for terminally ill patients and their families and includes services such as palliative care, bereavement counseling and respite care. They analyzed data on over 2,000 patients receiving care from over 400 hospices nationwide in an effort to determine if for-profit and non-profit hospices provided a similar pattern of care to their terminally ill patients.

"The shift from a non-profit, grassroots movement to an industry with a sizable for-profit presence is dramatic," says Bradley. "We questioned whether this could have changed end-of-life care and found that it does."

According to the study's lead author, EPH graduate student Melissa D.A. Carlson, "As the presence of for-profit firms in health care delivery continues to grow, it is imperative for the public health community to better understand the impact of profit motive on patient care, particularly for vulnerable patients like the elderly and the dying."

William T. Gallo, associate research scientist at Yale, was also an author on the study.

This research was conducted with support from the Nathan Cummings Foundation, the Patrick and Catherine Weldon Donaghue Medical Research Foundation, and the Claude D. Pepper Older Americans Independence Center at Yale.

-- By Karen Peart


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

Alpern named as new medical school dean

Sixteen honored for strengthening town-gown ties

Author Fadiman named first Francis Writer in Residence

Yale counselor helped ease grief of war-torn families in Kosovo and Iraq

Media failed to 'connect the dots' before 9/11, journalist says

With a hoisting of tentacles, giant squid returns to Peabody

Alumni delegates explore issues . . .

Threatened nation-state is topic of two-day YCIAS conference

Event showcasing medical students' original research . . .

New center offers treatment for primary immunodeficiencies

The letters of literary figures are featured in Beinecke exhibit

In elderly, recovery from injuries often good . . .

Study: For-profit hospices offer fewer services than non-profits

Chemotherapy agent called cisplatin effectively transmits . . .

Scientists learn more about bond of water molecules, protons

New fund will support YSN faculty's initiatives to improve health care

Juniors are recognized for scholarship and character

'Modernist Voices' will explore themes in American and British literature

Dr. Terri Fried lauded for her work in geriatric patient care and research

Event explores new advances in chemical biology

Yale Books in Brief

Campus Notes


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