Los Angeles Times

Seeing for-profit hospice up close

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Re “The perils of a profit motive in hospice,” Opinion comic, Feb. 5

I am a retired registered nurse. I spent my gainfully employed years in pediatric and adult oncology as well as hospice care for children and adults. I would like to thank Dr. Nathan Gray for his excellent op-ed comic on for-profit hospice care.

I experience­d both nonprofit and for-profit care as an employee. I left the forprofit agency as soon as I could. The stress over costs versus care was antithetic­al to any oath I took to provide care.

My anger and disappoint­ment in the care provided my mother-in-law in her last days left me in tears. As family members, we never received the emotional support so important in end-of-life care.

The recent care given my friend and her husband through the Department of Veterans Affairs was so much more appropriat­e and supportive. The difference was stunning.

Judith Church Bailey Long Beach

It is difficult to disagree with Gray’s piece on playing the profit game with a human’s precious final few moments of life.

But how is this different than profit taking in the larger picture of healthcare? Should doctors be considerin­g the monetary consequenc­es of delivering the best results for their patients? Should insurance companies, actuaries and corporatio­ns be involved in any way in human healthcare?

We can’t afford a better healthcare system? Taxes will go up? Well, of course taxes will go up, but insurance costs would go down, way down, or even disappear.

The richest nation on Earth can’t afford to fix a confusing healthcare system that is far too expensive? I don’t get it.

Denys Arcuri

Indio

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