4.5 Article

Analysis of Cancer Patient Decision-Making and Health Service Utilization after Enforcement of the Life-Sustaining Treatment Decision-Making Act in Korea

Journal

CANCER RESEARCH AND TREATMENT
Volume 54, Issue 1, Pages 20-29

Publisher

KOREAN CANCER ASSOCIATION
DOI: 10.4143/crt.2021.131

Keywords

Terminally ill; Life support care; Neoplasms

Categories

Funding

  1. Dongguk University

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This study analyzed the decision-making patterns for life-sustaining treatment (LST) and medical service utilization changes after the enforcement of the Life-Sustaining Treatment Decision-Making Act. The results showed that the cancer patient's own decision-making was associated with earlier decision-making, less use of certain critical treatments, and lower medical costs.
Purpose This study aimed to confirm the decision-making patterns for life-sustaining treatment (LST) and analyze medical service utilization changes after enforcement of the Life-Sustaining Treatment Decision-Making Act. Materials and Methods Of 1,237 patients who completed legal forms for life-sustaining treatment (hereafter called the LST form) at three academic hospitals and died at the same institutions, 1,018 cancer patients were included. Medical service utilization and costs were analyzed using claims data. Results The median time to death from completion of the LST form was three days (range, 0 to 248 days). Of these, 517 people died within two days of completing the document, and 36.1% of all patients prepared the LST form themselves. The frequency of use of the intensive care unit, continuous renal replacement therapy, and mechanical ventilation was significantly higher when the families filled out the form without knowing the patient's intention. In the top 10% of the medical expense groups, the decision-makers for LST were family members rather than patients (28% patients vs. 32% family members who knew and 40% family members who did not know the patient's intention). Conclusion The cancer patient's own decision-making rather than the family's decision was associated with earlier decision-making, less use of some critical treatments (except chemotherapy) and expensive evaluations, and a trend toward lower medical costs.

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