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Study finds race and ethnicity affect use of hospice services among patients with advanced cancer
February 11, 2009
BOSTON -- Race and ethnicity appear to have an effect on whether a patient with terminal cancer uses hospice care services, according to a study led by researchers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC). Published in the January 2009 issue of the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society (JAGS), the findings demonstrate that blacks and Asians with terminal cancer use end-of-life services less frequently than do whites and Hispanics. According to senior author Ellen McCarthy, PhD, of BIDMC's Division of General Medicine and Primary Care, the researchers studied the records of 41,000 terminal cancer patients over age 65. All received their health insurance coverage through Medicare. After accounting for a number of other factors - including income and physical health - their findings showed that compared with whites and Hispanics, black and Asian patients were more likely to be hospitalized frequently, to be hospitalized for prolonged periods, to receive care in an intensive care unit (ICU), and to die in the hospital. Compared with the other patients, black patients were nine percent less likely to enroll in a hospice program and Asian Americans were 24 percent less likely to do so. These same two population groups were also 26 percent and 17 percent more likely, respectively, to be hospitalized in the intensive care unit at least twice during their last month of life.
"Going forward, it will be important to find out whether patients' personal preferences, unequal access to health care, or both are fueling racial differences in end-of-life care," explains the study's lead author Alexander Smith, MD, a former fellow in the Harvard General Medicine Fellowship Program at BIDMC. "Minority patients may be bearing the burdens of high-intensity care at the end of life, without realizing the benefits of hospice and palliative care."
Adds McCarthy, "In order to develop effective strategies to promote hospice and palliative care services for these underserved populations, further research is needed to clarify the extent to which racial and ethnic differences in end-of-life care are due to cultural factors versus inequities in care."
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
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Surviving Terminal Cancer: Clinical Trials, Drug Cocktails, and Other Treatments Your Oncologist Won't Tell You About
by Ben A. Williams (Author)
(Fairview Press) Univ. of California, San Diego. Consumer text explains how patients can improve their odds for survival by demanding control over their health care, research conventional and alternative treatments, creating their own treatment strategy, and using the Internet to learn of new medical advances. Softcover.
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Crazy Sexy Cancer
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Studio: Gaiam Americas Release Date: 03/04/2008 Run time: 90 minutes
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Alive Again!: Bill Banks, Terminal Cancer - 48 Hours to Live
by Bill Banks (Author)
One of the greatest healing testimonies in print. A healing from cancer lasting over 30 years. With six different terminal conditions, and numerous malignant tumors, read how one man sought the healing accounts in Scripture for strength and encouragement. Follow his story as he fights to live during 6 months of chemotherapy, radiation, and dialysis, and then is told he has only 48 hours to live! When the doctors gave up - God didn't. Find answers to the questions: Is It God's Will To Heal? And, Does God Want To Heal You?
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Extreme Clubhits VIII [RARE]
1 Absurd Minds The Body (v.1) (Exklusiv Vorab) (3:13)
2 God Module Telekinetic (5:07)
3 Terminal Choice Eiszeit (4:22)
4 KiEw Tunnel (4:09)
5 Pzychobitch Wake Up (Remixed By S.I.T.D.) (6:15)
6 S.V.D Big Bad City (NYC Version) (5:33)
7 Op:l Bastards Scorpius (5:13)
8 Nachzehrer Handsome (4:13)
9 Soul In Sadness Too Short Eternity (Kramm Mix) (5:01)
10 Superikone Warten (Dunkle Wolken) (3:53)
11 Cancer Barrack Beischlaf Mit 60 Kg Hackfleisch (5:02)
12 Fair Sex, The Not Now. Not Here. (5:26)
13 Invincible Spirit, The Push! (7:04)
14 Frank The Baptist Bleeding In My Arms (3:10)
15 Bloody Dead And Sexy Flies In The Bottle (4:49)
16 Murder At The Registry The Creatures Are Having Fun With The Hollywood Dreamblaster (4:00)
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Leave Em Laughing
Starring: Red Buttons, Elisha Cook Jr., Allen Garfield, Anne Jackson, Adrienne Kingman Directed By: Jackie Cooper Also With: Julian Fowles (Producer), Charles W. Fries (Producer), Paul Harrison (Producer), Alan Sacks (Producer)
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Randy Pausch: Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams - The Lecture That Inspired the Book "The Last Lecture" [DVD]
by Carnegie Mellon University
On September 18, 2007, Carnegie Mellon professor and alumnus Randy Pausch delivered a one-of-a-kind last lecture that made the world stop and pay attention. It became an Internet sensation viewed by millions, an international media story, and a best-selling book that has been published in 35 languages. To this day, people everywhere continue to talk about Randy, share his message and put his life lessons into action in their own lives.
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Help Me Live: 20 Things People with Cancer Want You to Know
by Lori Hope (Author)
When we hear that someone close to us has been diagnosed with cancer, we want nothing more than to comfort them with words of hope, support, and love. But sometimes we don’t know what to say or do, and don’t feel comfortable asking. With sensitive insights and thoughtful anecdotes, HELP ME LIVE provides a personal yet thoroughly researched account of words and actions that are most helpful. Based on the author’s own experiences with cancer, as well as interviews and surveys with many others who have had this disease, each chapter tells intimate stories about one of the 20 most important messages people with cancer want to convey, such as "I need to forget—and laugh," "Asking my permission can spare me pain," "I want you to understand if I don’t call you back or see you," and "I...
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Celebrating Julienne - a gay woman faces terminal breast cancer
SILVER WORLDMEDAL NEW YORK FILM & VIDEO FESTIVALS 2001 Julienne is a vibrant, down-to-earth woman in a fulfilling job. Her great passions are her garden, cottage, books, and partner of five years, Loretta. But their idyllic life starts on a roller coaster ride when they discover Julienne has a voracious form of breast cancer. Four weeks after the shock diagnosis, Julienne's five close women cousins come together for what will be their final reunion. Given just months to live, Julienne sets about organising her life - and death - taking us on a unforgettable journey of good humour, straight talking and remarkable insights on life. This is a heart warming and inspiring story, told through the eyes of one of Julienne's cousins, TV journalist and film-maker Kay Stammers. For all...
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CANCER REGISTRY MANAGEMENT: PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE
by NATIONAL CANCER REGISTRY ASSOCIATION (Author)
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Goodbye, Walter: The Inspiring Story of a Terminal Cancer Patient
by RuthAnn Hogue (Author), C. Stratton Hill (Foreword)
Terminal cancer patient Walter Schifter was contemplating his life. Reporter RuthAnn Hogue was documenting both his life and impending death while contemplating a few eternal matters of her own. Barely out of journalism school, the 35-year-old mother of five was nearing her final court date in divorce court. She hadn't been to church in months. At least she had a best friend to see her through the turmoil. If only she were single already, maybe he could be her boyfriend. But there were serious issues to consider. For starters, Jason, a talented television news producer, was more than 12 years her junior. On top of that, they belonged to different faiths. Throw in a budding friendship with someone of the opposite sex before the divorce was final -- at a time when nearly every...
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