Effect of a palliative home care team on hospital admissions among patients with advanced cancer
Open Access
- 1 June 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Palliative Medicine
- Vol. 17 (4) , 315-321
- https://doi.org/10.1191/0269216303pm744oa
Abstract
This was a quasi-experimental study designed to determine whether, in patients with advanced cancer, a palliative home care team (PHCT) modified hospital utilization in the last six months before death. Of 2503 cancer deaths in the municipality of Genoa, Italy, in 1991, 189 (7.5%) received care from a PHCT. Three hundred and seventy-eight controls matched for primary tumour were selected. The groups were similar in terms of age, gender and most other demographic variables, except that educational level was lower, and times to death, from first diagnosis and from diagnosis of advanced or metastatic cancer, were longer among PHCT patients compared with the controls. Before referral to a PHCT, or a matched time in controls, both groups spent about 15% of days in hospital. After admission to a PHCT, the percentages of days in hospital increased in both groups as death approached, but it was much higher in the control group (30.3%; 95% confidence interval (CI): 26–34) than in the PHCT group (19.0%; 95% CI: 15–23). The difference between groups was most marked in the last month of life, and disappeared among those patients who were in care for more than 120 days (throughout the course of their illness). We conclude that a PHCT appears to reduce days in hospital and allows patients to spend more time at home. Differences in time in care between groups requires further investigations.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effectiveness of Team-Managed Home-Based Primary CareA Randomized Multicenter TrialJAMA, 2000
- Place of Care in Advanced Cancer: A Qualitative Systematic Literature Review of Patient PreferencesJournal of Palliative Medicine, 2000
- Do specialist palliative care teams improve outcomes for cancer patients? A systematic literature reviewPalliative Medicine, 1998
- Effectiveness of home care programmes for patients with incurable cancer on their quality of life and time spent in hospital: systematic reviewBMJ, 1998
- Methodologic issues in effectiveness research on palliative cancer care: a systematic review.Journal of Clinical Oncology, 1997
- Cost Savings at the End of LifeJAMA, 1996
- Economics and evaluation of palliative carePalliative Medicine, 1996
- Effects of an Expanding Home Care Program for the Terminally IIIMedical Care, 1987
- An alternative in terminal care: Results of the national hospice studyJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1986
- A randomized controlled study of a home health care team.American Journal of Public Health, 1985