Medical Student Research Office, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York, USA.
Brookdale Department of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2021 Aug;69(8):2143-2151. doi: 10.1111/jgs.17171. Epub 2021 Apr 21.
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: The majority of end-of-life (EOL) caregiving is provided by unpaid family members. An increasing number of older adults are kinless (without close family/partnerships) and may have insufficient caregiver support to remain at home at the EOL. We therefore determined what proportion of older adults are kinless at the EOL and assessed the association of kinlessness with EOL care.
Retrospective analysis of Health and Retirement Study decedents, 2002-2015.
US population-based sample.
Decedents age 51+ who died within 1 year of interview (n = 3844) and subset who are community-dwelling at last interview.
Kinlessness was defined as lacking a spouse/partner and children. Primary outcome measure was location of death. Secondary outcome measures included contextual EOL measures such as symptom burden and caregiver support.
A total of 7.4% of decedents were kinless at the EOL. Kinless decedents were more likely to be female, nonwhite, enrolled in Medicaid, living alone, or living in a nursing home prior to death. Although community-dwelling kinless decedents received fewer hours of caregiving per week at the EOL (34.7 vs. 56.2, p < 0.05) and were more likely to die in nursing homes (18.1% vs. 10.3%, p < 0.05) than those with kin, they did not have higher EOL symptom burden or treatment intensity (e.g., intensive care unit use). In multinomial logistic analysis controlling for demographic and illness characteristics, kinless decedents living in the community before death had a twofold increased risk of dying in the nursing home (odds ratio [OR] = 2.02 [95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.09-3.72]) and a trend toward increased risk of hospital death (OR = 1.60 [95% CI = 0.96-2.69]) versus home setting.
Kinless individuals are more likely to die in nursing homes, even if they are living in the community in their last year of life. Expanded long-term care services and policies are needed to enable all older adults regardless of their family support systems to receive high-quality EOL care.
背景/目的:大多数临终关怀(EOL)护理都是由无薪家庭成员提供的。越来越多的老年人没有亲密的家人/伴侣,在 EOL 时可能得不到足够的护理人员支持来留在家里。因此,我们确定了在 EOL 时无亲人的老年人的比例,并评估了无亲人与 EOL 护理的关系。
对 2002-2015 年健康与退休研究死亡者进行回顾性分析。
美国基于人群的样本。
年龄在 51 岁及以上,在访谈后 1 年内死亡的死者(n=3844),以及最后一次访谈时居住在社区的亚组。
无亲人被定义为没有配偶/伴侣和孩子。主要结局指标是死亡地点。次要结局指标包括症状负担和护理人员支持等 EOL 相关指标。
共有 7.4%的死者在 EOL 时无亲人。无亲人的死者更可能是女性、非白人、参加医疗补助、独居或在死前居住在养老院。尽管居住在社区的无亲人死者在 EOL 时每周接受的护理时间较少(34.7 小时与 56.2 小时,p<0.05),并且更有可能在养老院死亡(18.1%与 10.3%,p<0.05),但他们的 EOL 症状负担或治疗强度没有更高(例如,重症监护病房的使用)。在控制人口统计学和疾病特征的多项逻辑回归分析中,在死前居住在社区的无亲人死者在养老院死亡的风险增加了两倍(优势比[OR]为 2.02[95%置信区间(CI)为 1.09-3.72]),并且有趋势表明在医院死亡的风险增加(OR 为 1.60[95%CI 为 0.96-2.69]),而不是在家中死亡。
即使在生命的最后一年居住在社区中,无亲人的个人也更有可能在养老院死亡。需要扩大长期护理服务和政策,以使所有老年人,无论其家庭支持系统如何,都能获得高质量的 EOL 护理。