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Seriously Ill Hospitalized Adults: Do We Spend Less on Older Patients?
(1996-09)
OBJECTIVE: To determine the effect of age on hospital resource use
for seriously ill adults, and to explore whether age-related differences in
resource use are explained by patients' severity of illness and preferences
for ...
Factors Associated With Do-Not-Resuscitate Orders: Patients' Preferences, Prognoses, and Physicians' Judgments
(1996-08-15)
BACKGROUND: Medical treatment decisions should be based on the
preferences of informed patients or their proxies and on the expected outcomes
of treatment. Because seriously ill patients are at risk for cardiac arrest,
examination ...
Assessing the Significance of Treatment Effects: Comments From the Perspective of Ethics
(1995-04)
The process of designing research protocols for testing treatment
effects and reporting the results of such research demands both explicit and
implicit value judgments. When measuring the effects of alternative
treatments, ...
Relationship Between Cancer Patients' Predictions of Prognosis and Their Treatment Preferences
(1998-06-03)
CONTEXT: Previous studies have documented that cancer patients tend
to overestimate the probability of long-term survival. If patient preferences
about the trade-offs between the risks and benefits associated with
alternative ...
Functional Status Among Survivors of in-Hospital Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
(1997-01-13)
OBJECTIVES: To describe functional outcomes of seriously III patients
who survived 2 months after in-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)
and to identify patient and clinical characteristics associated with ...