A cancer patient in the final week of life often faces a flood of blood tests, scans, and hospital stays. A new study from Jordan shows a clear way to change that. When palliative care is involved, patients need fewer tests and their families face lower costs.
This matters because cancer is a leading cause of death worldwide. In the last days, patients and families want comfort and dignity. But care can become a cycle of intense testing and hospital visits. That adds stress and expense. It can also pull focus away from what matters most.
For years, many hospitals have treated palliative care as a last resort. It is often called in only when all other options are gone. But here is the twist. This study suggests that palliative care, when started earlier, can reduce the intensity of care at the end of life. It does not mean giving up. It means shifting the focus to comfort and quality of life.
Think of the body like a factory that is running at full speed. In late-stage cancer, the factory is breaking down. More tests and procedures are like adding extra shifts and overtime. It costs more and does not fix the core problem. Palliative care acts like a manager who turns off the lights and locks the doors when the work is done. It helps the body rest. It helps the family plan.
The study looked at 299 adult cancer patients who died at a single tertiary cancer center in Jordan between February 2017 and May 2018. Researchers reviewed who managed their care at death, what tests were done in the last week, and the costs of those tests. They compared patients managed by oncology teams with those managed by palliative care teams.
Patients managed by palliative care had fewer tests and lower costs. In the last seven days of life, the average cost per patient was about 397 dollars for palliative care patients. For oncology patients, it was about 857 dollars. That is more than double. Oncology patients also had more tests, with an average of 6.6 tests per patient compared to 4.2 for palliative care patients. Tests were also done closer to death in oncology patients, often within the last day.
But there is a catch. Referrals to palliative care were often late. Among patients still under oncology care at death, 29 percent had a palliative care referral request. Yet they did not transition to active palliative management. The time from referral request to death was much shorter for these patients. This suggests the system is not using palliative care early enough to make a real difference.
This does not mean palliative care is available everywhere right now.
Experts in the field note that early integration of palliative care can improve both patient outcomes and resource use. The goal is to align care with what patients and families want. That often means more time at home, less time in the hospital, and a focus on comfort.
For patients and families, this study is a reminder to ask about palliative care early. It is not about giving up on treatment. It is about adding a layer of support that can reduce stress and costs. Talk to your oncology team about when palliative care might help. It can be offered alongside cancer treatments.
The study has limits. It looked at one center in Jordan, so results may not apply everywhere. It was also a retrospective review, which means it looked back at past data rather than testing a new treatment. More research is needed to see how these findings translate to other countries and health systems.
What happens next? Researchers hope to see more studies on early palliative care in different settings. Hospitals may use this data to rethink how they refer patients. The goal is to make palliative care a standard part of cancer care, not a last resort.