The quality of end-of-life care for Taiwanese cancer decedents was substantially inferior to that previously reported and to that recommended as benchmarks for not providing overly aggressive care near the end of life.
Controlling for patient demographics and cormorbidity burden, EOL care in Taiwan was more aggressive for patients with cancer with highly malignant and extensive diseases, for patients with oncologists as primary care providers, or in hospitals with abundant health care resources. Health policies should aim to ensure that all patients receive treatments that best meet their individual needs and interests and that resources are devoted to care that produces the greatest health benefits.
Methamphetamine use is significantly associated with a risk of subsequent cardiovascular and cerebrovascular complications. Age appears to be an effect modifier for the risk estimation.
Continued chemotherapy and heavy use of life-sustaining treatments in the last month of life coupled with lack of hospice care to support Taiwanese pediatric cancer patients dying at home may lead to multiple unplanned health care encounters, prolonged hospitalization at EOL, and eventual death in an acute care hospital for the majority of these patients. Future research should design interventions that enable Taiwanese pediatric cancer patients to receive EOL care that best meets the individual or the parental needs and preferences.
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