COMMUNITY WEALTH, COMMUNITY HEALTH
Each year, the County Health Rankings rate the health outcomes of each county in the United States. Using the data from these County Health Rankings, the authors of this study on wealth and health outcomes examined the assumption that lower-income counties perform worse than wealthier ones. They found that wealthier communities performed better but more than a quarter of those counties performed far better than wealth alone would suggest. Further, each additional percentage point of total public spending allocated toward community health care and public health increased the chances of a county being an over-performer by 3.7%. Community wealth correlates with health, but not always. Shifting spending to certain social services may positively impact population health.
CHANGING TOBACCO CULTURE
More than 58 million non-smokers are exposed to second-hand smoke. The Smoke Free Homes program, consisting of three mailings and a single counseling telephone call, was implemented in smoking-discordant households (≥1 smoker and ≥1 non-smoker) in Texas to protect non-smokers. Working in partnership with 2-1-1 social services information and referral systems, these authors report on a randomized controlled trial that enrolled 508 primarily low-income, African American women. At six months, 63% of the intervention participants self-reported smoke-free homes vs. 38% of control participants. The goal of this low intensity program targets reduced exposure to smoke rather than smoking cessation, and could be extended to federally-subsidized housing.
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PLANNING FOR END-OF-LIFE
Results of a recent survey show that older adults are more likely than younger people to have documented their end-of-life wishes. Despite this, few adults with or without written documents discussed end-of-life care with their doctors.
The figure above shows that on average, those surveyed had a 44% likelihood of having a written plan or could identify someone to make decisions about their end-of-life care. Age, education, and discussions about death are predictors of having such a plan. Those with a college education or higher were most likely to have a written document, compared to those with some college, high school, or less education. Also, talking about death while growing up correlated to having written documents about wishes for end-of-life care.
In addition, adults aged 65 or older were most likely to have a written document or to name someone to take charge of their medical decisions. Although older adults are more likely to have some end-of-life plan, the survey found that seriously ill older adults are less likely than their healthier counterparts to report having written documents. This is linked to seriously ill people reporting lower education levels, which the above figure depicts as being a strong predictor of not having a written plan for end-of-life.
Care settings encouraging or mandating doctors to use an advanced directive toolkit, like the one created by the National Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment Paradigm, can improve the communication gap, and help seriously ill patients better express their wishes for end-of-life care.
Graph: Kaiser Family Foundation, Serious Illness in Late Life: The Public’s Views and Experiences, Section 3: Documenting and Talking about Wishes, Figure 31: Education, Age, and Discussions of Death Growing Up Are Strongest Predictors of Having Written Documents, Bianca DiJulio, Liz Hamel, Bryan Wu, and Mollyann Brodie
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