Researchers studied 51 hospitals in New York that either did or did not implement a palliative care program between 2008 and 2014. They examined data for 73,370 patients who died during their hospitalizations.
Of the total number of patients included in the study, 51.3 percent received care in hospitals that implemented palliative care services, and 48.7 percent received care in a hospital that did not.
Researchers found that patients who received the palliative care services were less likely to be admitted to the ICU than patients admitted to the same hospitals before the palliative care program was implemented.
The implementation of palliative care programs was associated with a 10 percent reduction in ICU use during hospitalizations where the patients died, compared to hospitals that did not implement palliative care services.
More articles on clinical leadership and infection control:
US cancer death rates see largest single-year drop on record
Children often receive unnecessary medical care, study finds
Another family joins mold-related class-action suit against Seattle Children’s