Disease-Specific Patterns of Hospice and Related Healthcare Use in an Incidence Cohort of Seriously Ill Elderly Patients
- 1 August 2002
- journal article
- Published by Mary Ann Liebert Inc in Journal of Palliative Medicine
- Vol. 5 (4) , 531-538
- https://doi.org/10.1089/109662102760269760
Abstract
There appears to be significant heterogeneity across diseases in their patterns of health care use at the end of life. We use a new, nationally representative sample of patients diagnosed in 1993 with 13 serious diseases to demonstrate this variation in rates of inpatient, outpatient, and hospice utilization. The diseases are: cancer of the lung, colon, pancreas, urinary tract, liver or biliary tract, head or neck, or central nervous system, as well as leukemia or lymphoma, stroke, congestive heart failure, hip fracture, or myocardial infarction. We present disease-specific rates of: length of stay, interhospital transfer, outpatient visits in the year before and 3 years after diagnosis, death within 4 years, and gender-specific hospice use rates among decedents. Among decedents with noncancer diagnoses, rates of hospice use vary from 5.9% to 8.7%. Among decedents with cancer diagnoses, rates vary from 15.2% to 35.2%. For the cohort overall, 14.2% of male decedents and 12.4% of female decedents used hospice. Patterns of end-of-life care vary substantially according to diagnosis.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Care After the Onset of Serious Illness: A Novel Claims-Based Dataset Exploiting Substantial Cross-Set Linkages to Study End-of-Life CareJournal of Palliative Medicine, 2002
- Geographic Variation in Hospice Use Prior to DeathJournal of the American Geriatrics Society, 2000
- Impact of Individual and Market Factors on the Timing of Initiation of Hospice Terminal CareMedical Care, 2000
- Predicting expenditures for Medicare beneficiaries with diabetes. A prospective cohort study from 1994 to 1996.Diabetes Care, 1999
- Survival of Medicare Patients after Enrollment in Hospice ProgramsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1996
- Developing a Quality Improvement Database Using Health Insurance Data: A Guided Tour with Application to Medicare's National Claims History FileAmerican Journal of Medical Quality, 1995
- Variation in office-based quality. A claims-based profile of care provided to Medicare patients with diabetesPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1995
- Epidemiologic Uses of Medicare DataEpidemiologic Reviews, 1993
- ARE HOSPITAL SERVICES RATIONED IN NEW HAVEN OR OVER-UTILISED IN BOSTON?The Lancet, 1987