Originally Posted by nosonew
So more or less it depends on the Hospice Organization itself?
The hospice I work for is non profit and allows this... yet I have a friend across the US that can not find a hospice to help with her 80 yoa MIL who has terminal ca but needs palliative radiation.
I have encouraged her to speak to other hospice organizations in her area. Thanks!
Its wonderful that your hospice can do this. You must be working for either a very large hospice or a hospice that has a lot of donated funds pooled for just such treatments. The cost of radiation treatments is many many times the per diem payment we get from medicare. It isn't that we don't "allow" it, its that we can't provide it for everybody who "needs" it and still remain a viable provider at our current size and level of funding.
I also question the "need" for it in all cases. Yes, there are some who do benefit from palliative radiation but there are also a huge number who just get it automatically. I have had so many disappointed families whose loved one completed a two week long course of daily "palliative" radiation treatments only to have them die two days later. The oncologists and radiologists in our hospital system have a weekly meeting to discuss their interesting cases and seek each other's input. EVERY single case of a stage IV cancer patient that I have seen come before it receives this response from the radiation doc: "I believe this patient would benefit from radiation therapy".