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Policy nudges toward medicalizing death and their...
Journal article

Policy nudges toward medicalizing death and their impact on planetary health

Abstract

Despite most Canadians preferring to die at home, over 50% die in hospitals, a setting often discordant with patient-centered end-of-life care and environmentally harmful. This article argues that healthcare policies unintentionally "nudge" patients and providers towards the medicalization of death, contributing to low-value care and significant greenhouse gas emissions. We analyze how inaccessibility to primary and palliative care, default "full code" status, overspecialization, and inadequate home-care supports perpetuate hospital deaths. Using an illustrative case, we demonstrate how these policies influence care trajectories from outpatient to hospital admission and disposition planning. Our aim is to highlight these underrecognized downstream effects to inform health leaders about opportunities to improve end-of-life care quality, align with patient preferences, and secondarily, benefit planetary health.

Authors

Nix HP; Sergeant M; Shetty N

Journal

Healthcare Management Forum, Vol. 38, No. 6, pp. 567–573

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Publication Date

November 1, 2025

DOI

10.1177/08404704251348813

ISSN

0840-4704

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