Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Study: Obese receive less ‘comfort care’

- By ANDREW M. SEAMAN

Obese people in the United States might not receive the same kind of care at the end of their lives as people who are thin or normal weight, suggests a new study.

Before they died, obese patients were less likely to enroll in hospice care, spent less time in hospice and were less likely to die at home than thinner people, researcher­s found.

End-of-life care was also more costly for obese people.

“People with obesity deserve high-quality care but may not be receiving it at the end of life,” said lead author Dr. John Harris, of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine in Pennsylvan­ia.

Dr. Harris and his colleagues wrote in the Annals of Internal Medicine that aside from health risks, obesity might present technical and logistical challenges during physical examinatio­ns and certain medical procedures.

Previous research also shows that stigma about weight affects how doctors and patients behave, they write.

To see how body weight is linked to health care at the end of life, the researcher­s used data collected between 1998 and 2012 from 5,677 people on Medicare, the U.S. government’s health insurance program for the elderly and disabled.

None of the participan­ts was living in nursing homes or other institutio­ns. The data were drawn from the last six months of their lives.

Based on body mass index, 7 percent of participan­ts were underweigh­t with a BMI of 18.5 or below, 44 percent were normal weight with a BMI of 18.5 to 24.9, 31 percent were overweight with a BMI of 25 to 29.9, and the rest were obese or morbidly obese with a BMI of at least 30.

The researcher­s found a 38 percent probabilit­y that people with a BMI of 20 would enter hospice care toward the end of life, compared with about 23 percent among people with a BMI of 40.

When people with a BMI of 40 did receive hospice care, it was typically for a shorter time than normal-weight people.

“It’s looks like people weren’t getting enrolled, and they got there later if they were enrolled,” Harris said.

Gaps in care generally rose as BMI increased, the researcher­s found.

“It seems like people with obesity are getting lower quality of care at the end of life,” Harris said.

The study can’t say why these gaps exist, but the researcher­s suggest it might have to do with obese people looking less gaunt toward the end of life and not being referred for hospice. Or, they may be unable to find a hospice program that can accommodat­e their health care and family’s needs.

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