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By Lindsey Tanner Associated Press
CHICAGO - Striking new research shows dying Blacks and Hispanics in the
United States have much steeper treatment costs than Whites, sobering
evidence that racial health care differences continue right up until death.
It’s not that minorities are being charged more than Whites. It’s that they
tend to get more costly, intensive treatments including feeding tubes and
other invasive medical procedures near death. That’s in sharp contrast with
what often happens throughout their lives, when minorities are less likely
than Whites to get aggressive medical care.
The results raise a troubling question about whether medical resources for
non-White patients are “misallocated over a lifetime,” with minorities
receiving more treatment at the end, when there is little chance of
improving or extending life, the study authors said.
The study appeared March 9 in Archives of Internal Medicine. It involved
nearly 160,000 patients on Medicare government benefits for the elderly and
records on their treatment in the last six months of life. It is the most
comprehensive on the topic and confirms results suggested in smaller studies
on disparities in end-of-life care, said co-author Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, a
researcher in the bioethics department at the National Institutes of Health.
Medicare costs in those final months averaged $20,166 for Whites. Among
Blacks, they were $26,704, about 30 percent higher; and among Hispanics,
$31,702 or almost 60 percent higher. Those individual cost differences can
add up to billions of dollars on a national scale, Dr. Emanuel said.
Reasons why minorities receive more costly end-of-life care are unclear; the
study had no data to explain that. But Dr. Emanuel and other doctors offered
several theories.
“Some of it may be preference. Some of it may be fear-based,” Dr. Emanuel
said.
Distrust of doctors and suspicions about getting less attentive treatment
than Whites likely is another factor, the study authors said.
Also, because of cultural or spiritual beliefs, some minorities are more
likely to hold out hope for a miraculous recovery, or to oppose letting
doctors play God and hasten death by abandoning treatment, said Dr. Elbert
Huang, a Chinese-American physician with the University of Chicago Medical
Center.
Letting doctors withdraw aggressive end-of-life treatment is mostly a
western European approach, Dr. Huang said.
In a smaller, earlier study of healthy elderly patients in Rochester, N.Y.,
Dr. William Bayer said he found Blacks were more likely than Whites to say
they would favor aggressive treatment even after brain death.
Blacks in that study tended to believe that “if God wants to take our lives,
he will decide when and where that will happen,” said Dr. Bayer, of the
University of Rochester Medical Center.
Dr. Otis Brawley, a Black physician in Atlanta and chief medical officer for
the American Cancer Society, said the new findings “make sense.”
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