Öhlén Joakim, Cohen Joachim, Håkanson Cecilia
a Department of Health Care Science , Palliative Research Centre (JÖ, CH), Ersta Sköndal University College , Stockholm , Sweden.
b Institute of Health and Care Sciences, University of Gothenburg Centre for Person-Centred Care (JÖ), Sahlgrenska Academy at the University of Gothenburg , Sweden.
Acta Oncol. 2017 Mar;56(3):455-461. doi: 10.1080/0284186X.2016.1250946. Epub 2016 Nov 11.
Place of death has for the past decade increasingly come to be regarded as a robust indicator of how palliative care is organized and provided, and is also recognized as an important factor for well being at the end of life. Variations in place of cancer deaths have previously been reported in the context of country-specific healthcare organization, but without differentiating between cancer types and national regional variations. Our aim was to examine, at a population level, where people with cancer diseases die in Sweden, and to investigate associations of place of death and cancer type with individual, socioeconomic and geographical characteristics of the deceased.
This population level study is based on death certificate data (sex; age; underlying cause of death and place of death) and population register data (educational attainment, marital status, living arrangements, area of residence, degree of urbanization, and healthcare region) of all 2012 cancer deaths in Sweden, with a registered place of death (hospital, nursing home, home, other places). Data were explored descriptively. To investigate associations between place of death and cancer types, and individual, socioeconomic and environmental characteristics, a series of multivariable logistic regression analyses were performed.
The most frequent type of cancer death occurring at home was upper gastrointestinal cancer (25.6%) and the least frequent was hematological cancer (15.2%). Regional variations in cancer deaths occurring at home ranged from 17.1% to 28.4%. Factors associated with place of death by cancer type were age, educational attainment, marital status, healthcare regions and degree of urbanization.
Large healthcare regional variations in place of death among different cancer types were found. The socioeconomic inequality previously demonstrated for screening, diagnostic and treatment processes, rehabilitation and survival thus also seems to be reflected in the place of death.
在过去十年中,死亡地点越来越被视为姑息治疗组织和提供方式的有力指标,同时也被认为是临终时幸福感的一个重要因素。此前曾在特定国家的医疗保健组织背景下报告过癌症死亡地点的差异,但未区分癌症类型和国家区域差异。我们的目的是在人群层面上研究瑞典癌症患者的死亡地点,并调查死亡地点和癌症类型与死者的个人、社会经济和地理特征之间的关联。
这项人群层面的研究基于瑞典2012年所有癌症死亡病例的死亡证明数据(性别、年龄、根本死因和死亡地点)以及人口登记数据(教育程度、婚姻状况、居住安排、居住地区、城市化程度和医疗保健区域),死亡地点已登记(医院、养老院、家中、其他地点)。对数据进行了描述性探索。为了研究死亡地点与癌症类型以及个人、社会经济和环境特征之间的关联,进行了一系列多变量逻辑回归分析。
在家中发生的最常见癌症死亡类型是上消化道癌症(25.6%),最不常见的是血液系统癌症(15.2%)。在家中发生的癌症死亡的区域差异在17.1%至28.4%之间。按癌症类型划分与死亡地点相关的因素包括年龄、教育程度、婚姻状况、医疗保健区域和城市化程度。
发现不同癌症类型的死亡地点在医疗保健区域存在很大差异。先前在筛查、诊断和治疗过程、康复及生存方面所显示的社会经济不平等似乎也反映在死亡地点上。