1 Department of Chronic Disease Epidemiology, Yale University School of Public Health, New Haven, Connecticut.
2 Cancer Outcomes, Public Policy, and Effectiveness Research (COPPER) Center, Yale Cancer Center, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut.
J Palliat Med. 2019 Jun;22(6):619-627. doi: 10.1089/jpm.2018.0436. Epub 2019 Jan 4.
Although the fragmentation of end-of-life care has been well documented, previous research has not examined racial and ethnic differences in transitions in care and hospice use at the end of life. Retrospective cohort study among 649,477 Medicare beneficiaries who died between July 2011 and December 2011. Sankey diagrams and heatmaps to visualize the health care transitions across race/ethnic groups. Among hospice enrollees, we examined racial/ethnic differences in hospice use patterns, including length of hospice enrollment and disenrollment rate. The mean number of care transitions within the last six months of life was 2.9 transitions (standard deviation [SD] = 2.7) for whites, 3.4 transitions (SD = 3.2) for African Americans, 2.8 transitions (SD = 3.0) for Hispanics, and 2.4 transitions (SD = 2.7) for Asian Americans. After adjusting for age and sex, having at least four transitions was significantly more common for African Americans (39.2%; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 38.8-39.6%) compared with whites (32.5%, 95% CI: 32.3-32.6%), and less common among Hispanics (31.2%, 95% CI: 30.4-32.0%), and Asian Americans (26.5%, 95% CI: 25.5-27.5%). Having no care transition was significantly more common for Asian Americans (33.0%, 95% CI: 32.0-34.1%) and Hispanics (28.8%, 95% CI: 28.0-29.6%), compared with African Americans (19.2%, 95% CI: 18.9-19.5%) and whites (18.9%, 95% CI: 18.8-19.0%). Among hospice users, whites, African Americans, and Hispanics had similar length of hospice enrollment, which was significantly longer than that of Asian Americans. Nonwhite patients were significantly more likely than white patients to experience hospice disenrollment. Racial/ethnic differences in patterns of end-of-life care are marked. Future studies to understand why such patterns exist are warranted.
尽管临终关怀的碎片化已经得到了充分的记录,但以前的研究并没有考察在生命末期护理和临终关怀的过渡方面存在的种族和民族差异。这是一项针对 649477 名在 2011 年 7 月至 2011 年 12 月期间去世的 Medicare 受益人的回顾性队列研究。桑基图和热图用于可视化跨种族/族裔群体的医疗保健过渡。在接受临终关怀的患者中,我们研究了种族/族裔差异对临终关怀使用模式的影响,包括临终关怀的登记和退出率。在生命的最后六个月内,白人的平均护理过渡次数为 2.9 次(标准差[SD] = 2.7),非裔美国人 3.4 次(SD = 3.2),西班牙裔 2.8 次(SD = 3.0),亚裔美国人 2.4 次(SD = 2.7)。在调整年龄和性别后,非裔美国人至少有 4 次过渡的比例明显高于白人(39.2%;95%置信区间[CI]:38.8-39.6%),而西班牙裔(31.2%;95% CI:30.4-32.0%)和亚裔美国人(26.5%;95% CI:25.5-27.5%)的比例较低。没有护理过渡的情况在亚裔美国人(33.0%;95% CI:32.0-34.1%)和西班牙裔(28.8%;95% CI:28.0-29.6%)中更为常见,而非裔美国人(19.2%;95% CI:18.9-19.5%)和白人(18.9%;95% CI:18.8-19.0%)中则较为少见。在接受临终关怀的患者中,白人、非裔美国人和西班牙裔的临终关怀登记时间相似,明显长于亚裔美国人。非白人患者比白人患者更有可能经历临终关怀退出。临终关怀模式存在明显的种族/民族差异。未来的研究有必要了解为什么会存在这种模式。