Department of Public Health Sciences, Center for Ethics, Humanities and Palliative Care, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY.
J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2013 Oct;14(10):741-8. doi: 10.1016/j.jamda.2013.03.009. Epub 2013 May 7.
The proportion of US deaths occurring in nursing homes (NHs) has been increasing in the past 2 decades and is expected to reach 40% by 2020. Despite being recognized as an important setting in the provision of end-of-life (EOL) care, little is known about the quality of care provided to dying NH residents. There has been some, but largely anecdotal evidence suggesting that many US NHs transfer dying residents to hospitals, in part to avoid incurring the cost of providing intensive on-site care, and in part because they lack resources to appropriately serve the dying residents. We assessed longitudinal trends and geographic variations in place of death among NH residents, and examined the association between residents' characteristics, treatment preferences, and the probability of dying in hospitals.
We used the Minimum Data Set (NH assessment records), Medicare denominator (eligibility) file, and Medicare inpatient and hospice claims to identify decedent NH residents. In CY2003-2007, there were 2,992,261 Medicare-eligible NH decedents from 16,872 US Medicare- and/or Medicaid-certified NHs. Our outcome of interest was death in NH or in a hospital. The analytical strategy included descriptive analyses and multiple logistic regression models, with facility fixed effects, to examine risk-adjusted temporal trends in place of death.
Slightly more than 20% of decedent NH residents died in hospitals each year. Controlling for individual-level risk factors and for facility fixed effects, the likelihood of residents dying in hospitals has increased significantly each year between 2003 through 2007.
This study fills a significant gap in the current literature on EOL care in US nursing homes by identifying frequent facility-to-hospital transfers and an increasing trend of in-hospital deaths. These findings suggest a need to rethink how best to provide care to EOL nursing home residents.
在美国,过去 20 年来,养老院(NH)中的死亡比例一直在增加,预计到 2020 年将达到 40%。尽管 NH 已被公认为提供临终关怀的重要场所,但对于 NH 临终居民的护理质量却知之甚少。有一些,但主要是轶事证据表明,许多美国 NH 将临终居民转移到医院,部分原因是为了避免承担提供强化现场护理的费用,部分原因是因为他们缺乏资源来妥善照顾临终居民。我们评估了 NH 居民死亡地点的纵向趋势和地域差异,并研究了居民特征、治疗偏好与在医院死亡的概率之间的关系。
我们使用最小数据集(NH 评估记录)、医疗保险分母(资格)文件以及医疗保险住院和临终关怀索赔,来确定符合条件的 NH 居民。在 2003-2007 年期间,有 16872 家美国医疗保险和/或医疗补助认证的 NH 中有 2992261 名符合条件的 NH 居民去世。我们感兴趣的结果是 NH 或医院死亡。分析策略包括描述性分析和多因素逻辑回归模型,采用机构固定效应,以检查调整个体风险因素和机构固定效应后,每年的死亡地点的时间趋势。
每年约有 20%的去世 NH 居民在医院死亡。在控制了个体风险因素和机构固定效应后,每年居民在医院死亡的可能性在 2003 年至 2007 年间显著增加。
本研究通过确定频繁的机构转院和住院死亡增加的趋势,填补了美国 NH 临终关怀研究的一个重要空白。这些发现表明,需要重新考虑如何为临终 NH 居民提供最佳护理。