In the Business of Dying: Questioning the Commercialization of Hospice

Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 39 (2):224-234 (2011)
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Abstract

In our society, some aspects of life are off-limits to commerce. We prohibit the selling of children and the buying of wives, juries, and kidneys. Tainted blood is an inevitable consequence of paying blood donors; even sophisticated laboratory tests cannot supplant the gift-giving relationship as a safeguard of the purity of blood. Like blood, health care is too precious, intimate, and corruptible to entrust to the market.The hospice movement in the United States is approximately 40 years old. During these past four decades, the concept of holistic, multidisciplinary care for patients who are suffering from a terminal illness has evolved from a modest, grassroots constellation of primarily volunteer-run and community-governed endeavors to a multimillion dollar industry where the surviving nonprofits compete with for-profit providers, often publicly traded, managed by M.B.A.-trained executives, and governed by corporate boards. The relatively recent emergence of for-profit hospice reflects an increasing commercialization of health care in the United States, the potentially adverse impact of which has been well documented.

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Variation in Patients' Hospice Costs.Haiden A. Huskamp, Joseph P. Newhouse, Jessica Cafarella Norcini & Nancy L. Keating - 2008 - Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 45 (2):232-244.

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