There are profound disparities in advanced dementia care. Nonwhite race is the most consistent risk factor associated with outcomes considered markers of poor-quality end-of-life care, including increased use of tube feeding (40), terminal hospitalizations (43), and lack of advance directives (46 - 47). However, even after patient characteristics are controlled for, these outcomes vary dramatically across the United States in a strikingly consistent pattern, with a general propensity for worse quality of care in the southeast (42 - 43,48,52,54,58,79). The reasons for these disparities remain unclear, but they underscore that care of advanced dementia care is driven by a complex interplay of individual preferences, cultural influences, regional market factors, facility characteristics, local practice patterns, and health care policies.