Department of Medicine, Duke University, Durham, USA; Division of Geriatrics, Duke University, Durham, USA; Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development, Duke University, Durham, USA; Center for Palliative Care, Duke University, Durham, USA; Geriatrics Research Education and Clinical Center, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
J Pain Symptom Manage. 2013 Nov;46(5):681-90. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2012.12.006. Epub 2013 Mar 21.
Although blacks use hospice at lower rates than whites in the U.S., racial differences in hospice use vary by geographic area.
To describe intercounty variability in black-white differences in hospice use and the association with the supply of health care resources.
Subjects were a retrospective cohort of Medicare beneficiaries in North and South Carolina who died in 2008. Using Wilcoxon tests and logistic regression, we examined the differences in the supply of health care resources (hospital beds and physicians per population age 65 years and older, percentage of generalists, etc.) between counties with and without racial disparity in hospice use. Counties with a racial disparity had significantly (P < 0.05) higher rates of hospice use among whites than blacks.
Of 76,283 decedents in 128 counties, 19.78% were black. In the 39 counties (30.47%) with racial disparity in hospice use, the mean proportion of whites who enrolled in hospice was 41.3% vs. 28.66% of blacks (P < 0.0001). Counties with more hospital beds per population age 65 years and older had a higher odds (OR, 1.39; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.04-1.86) and those with a larger proportion of generalists had a lower odds (OR, 0.01; 95% CI 0.001-0.476) of having a racial disparity in hospice use.
In most counties, the rates of hospice use were similar for blacks and whites. In counties with a racial disparity, there were more resources to deliver aggressive care (i.e., hospital beds and specialists). Because of a greater preference for life-sustaining therapies, blacks may be more likely to use acute care services at the end of life when resources for the delivery of these services are readily available.
尽管在美国,黑人群体使用临终关怀服务的比例低于白人群体,但临终关怀服务的使用在不同地区存在种族差异。
描述美国北卡罗来纳州和南卡罗来纳州各县之间在黑人和白人使用临终关怀服务方面差异的变化情况,并分析这种差异与医疗保健资源供应之间的关系。
本研究的对象为 2008 年在北卡罗来纳州和南卡罗来纳州去世的 Medicare 受益人的回顾性队列。使用 Wilcoxon 检验和逻辑回归分析,我们比较了使用临终关怀服务存在种族差异和不存在种族差异的县之间医疗保健资源(每 10 万 65 岁及以上人口的医院床位和医生数量、通科医生的比例等)供应的差异。在存在种族差异的县,白人使用临终关怀服务的比例明显高于黑人(P<0.05)。
在 128 个县的 76283 名死者中,黑人占 19.78%。在 39 个(30.47%)存在临终关怀服务使用种族差异的县中,白人参加临终关怀服务的比例为 41.3%,而黑人的比例为 28.66%(P<0.0001)。每 10 万 65 岁及以上人口的医院床位数量越多,出现种族差异的可能性就越高(比值比[OR],1.39;95%置信区间[CI],1.04-1.86),而通科医生的比例越高,出现种族差异的可能性就越低(OR,0.01;95%CI,0.001-0.476)。
在大多数县,黑人和白人使用临终关怀服务的比例相似。在存在种族差异的县,提供积极治疗(即医院床位和专科医生)的资源更多。由于对维持生命疗法的偏好,当提供这些服务的资源更容易获得时,黑人在生命末期更有可能使用急性护理服务。