Division of Health & Environment, Abt Associates, Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
Geisel School of Medicine, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, New Hampshire, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2021 Apr;69(4):900-907. doi: 10.1111/jgs.16905. Epub 2020 Nov 9.
Assess whether frequently-used claims-based end-of-life (EOL) measures are associated with higher ratings of care quality.
Retrospective cohort study.
SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: Deceased fee-for-service Medicare beneficiaries with cancer who underwent chemotherapy during July 2016 to January 2017 and died within 12 months and their caregiver respondents to an after-death survey (n = 2,559).
We examined claims-based measures of EOL care: chemotherapy 14 days or more before death; inpatient admissions, intensive care unit (ICU) use, and emergency department (ED) visits 30 days or more before death; hospice election and the timing of election before death. Primary outcomes are family ratings of "excellent" care in the last month of life and reports that hospice care began "at the right time." Associations were assessed with logistic regression, adjusted by patient characteristics.
Family rated EOL care as excellent less often, if within 30 days before death the cancer patient had inpatient admissions (1 hospitalization = 41.5% vs 51.5% none, adjusted difference -10.1 percentage points), ICU use (38.6% for any ICU use vs 47.4% none; adjusted difference -8.8 percentage points), ED visits (41.0% 1 visit vs 51.6% no visits; adjusted difference -10.6 percentage points), or elected hospice within 7 days before death. Among hospice enrollees, family more often reported that hospice began at the right time if it started at least 7 days before death (hospice 1-2 days before death 60.2% vs hospice 7-13 days 74.9%; adjusted difference +14.7 percentage points).
Claims-based measures of EOL care for cancer patients that reflect avoidance of hospital-based care and earlier hospice enrollment are associated with higher ratings of care quality by bereaved family members.
评估常用的基于理赔的临终(EOL)指标是否与更高的护理质量评分相关。
回顾性队列研究。
地点/参与者:接受化疗的 2016 年 7 月至 2017 年 1 月期间患有癌症的已故按服务收费医疗保险受益人,且在 12 个月内死亡,以及他们的护理人员在死后调查中的回复者(n=2559)。
我们检查了基于理赔的 EOL 护理措施:化疗在死亡前 14 天或以上;在死亡前 30 天或以上的住院、重症监护病房(ICU)使用和急诊部(ED)就诊;临终选择和临终选择的时间。主要结果是家属在生命的最后一个月对“卓越”护理的评分,以及报告说临终关怀开始“恰到好处”。通过逻辑回归评估关联,通过患者特征进行调整。
如果在死亡前 30 天内癌症患者有住院治疗(1 次住院=41.5%比无住院治疗 51.5%;调整差异-10.1 个百分点)、ICU 使用(任何 ICU 使用 38.6%比无 ICU 使用 47.4%;调整差异-8.8 个百分点)、ED 就诊(1 次就诊 41.0%比无就诊 51.6%;调整差异-10.6 个百分点)或在死亡前 7 天内选择临终关怀,那么家属对 EOL 护理的评分较差。在临终关怀注册者中,如果临终关怀开始至少在死亡前 7 天,家属更常报告说临终关怀开始得恰到好处(临终关怀死亡前 1-2 天 60.2%比临终关怀死亡前 7-13 天 74.9%;调整差异+14.7 个百分点)。
反映避免基于医院的护理和更早的临终关怀注册的基于理赔的癌症患者 EOL 护理措施与失去亲人的家庭成员对护理质量的更高评分相关。