Population Health and Genomics Division, University of Dundee Medical School, Ninewells Hospital and Medical School, Dundee.
NHS Tayside, Dundee.
Br J Gen Pract. 2019 Nov 28;69(689):e860-e868. doi: 10.3399/bjgp19X706637. Print 2019 Dec.
People with advanced cancer frequently attend unscheduled care, but little is known about the factors influencing presentations. Most research focuses on accident and emergency (A&E) and does not consider GP out-of-hours (GPOOH).
To describe the frequency and patterns of unscheduled care use by people with cancer in their last year of life and to examine the associations of demographic and clinical factors with unscheduled care attendance.
Retrospective cohort study of all 2443 people who died from cancer in Tayside, Scotland, during 2012-2015. Clinical population datasets were linked to routinely collected clinical data using the Community Health Index (CHI) number.
Anonymised CHI-linked data were analysed in SafeHaven, with descriptive analysis, using binary logistic regression for adjusted associations.
Of the people who died from cancer, 77.9% ( = 1904) attended unscheduled care in the year before death. Among unscheduled care users, most only attended GPOOH ( = 1070, 56.2%), with the rest attending A&E only ( = 204, 10.7%), or both ( = 630, 33.1%). Many attendances occurred in the last week ( =1360, 19.7%), last 4 weeks ( = 2541, 36.7%), and last 12 weeks ( = 4174, 60.3%) of life. Age, sex, deprivation, and cancer type were not significantly associated with unscheduled care attendance. People living in rural areas were less likely to attend unscheduled care: adjusted odds ratio (aOR) 0.64 (95% confidence interval = 0.50 to 0.82). Pain was the commonest coded clinical reason for presenting (GPOOH: = 482, 10.5%; A&E: = 336, 28.8%). Of people dying from cancer, = 514, 21.0%, were frequent users (≥5 attendances/year), and accounted for over half ( = 3986, 57.7%) of unscheduled care attendances.
Unscheduled care attendance by people with advanced cancer was substantially higher than previously reported, increased dramatically towards the end of life, was largely independent of demographic factors and cancer type, and was commonly for pain and palliative care.
晚期癌症患者经常需要非计划性医疗护理,但人们对影响就诊的因素知之甚少。大多数研究都集中在急症(A&E),并未考虑全科医生非工作时间(GPOOH)。
描述癌症患者在生命的最后一年中使用非计划性医疗护理的频率和模式,并研究人口统计学和临床因素与非计划性护理就诊之间的关联。
这是一项对苏格兰泰赛德 2012 年至 2015 年间所有 2443 名癌症死亡患者的回顾性队列研究。使用社区健康索引(CHI)号将临床人群数据集与常规收集的临床数据进行链接。
在 SafeHaven 中对匿名链接的 CHI 数据进行分析,采用二元逻辑回归进行调整关联的描述性分析。
在死于癌症的患者中,77.9%(=1904)在死亡前一年接受了非计划性医疗护理。在非计划性护理使用者中,大多数人仅接受 GPOOH(=1070,56.2%),其余人仅接受 A&E(=204,10.7%)或两者均接受(=630,33.1%)。许多就诊发生在生命的最后一周(=1360,19.7%)、最后四周(=2541,36.7%)和最后 12 周(=4174,60.3%)。年龄、性别、贫困程度和癌症类型与非计划性护理就诊无显著关联。居住在农村地区的人不太可能接受非计划性医疗护理:调整后的优势比(aOR)为 0.64(95%置信区间=0.50 至 0.82)。疼痛是最常见的编码临床就诊原因(=482,10.5%;=336,28.8%)。在死于癌症的患者中,=514,21.0%,是频繁就诊者(≥5 次/年),占非计划性护理就诊的一半以上(=3986,57.7%)。
晚期癌症患者的非计划性护理就诊率远高于此前报道,在生命末期急剧增加,主要与人口统计学因素和癌症类型无关,常见于疼痛和姑息治疗。