Department of Health Management and Health Economics, University of Oslo, Norway.
Oslo Economics, Oslo, Norway.
Acta Oncol. 2021 Aug;60(8):984-991. doi: 10.1080/0284186X.2021.1917000. Epub 2021 May 12.
An important goal of health care systems is equitable access to health care. Previous research, however, indicates that men receive more cancer care and health care resources than women. The aim of this study was to investigate whether there is a gender difference in terms of end-of-life cancer treatment in hospitals in Norway.
We used nationwide patient-level data from the Norwegian Patient Registry (2013-2017, = 64,694), and aggregated data from the Norwegian Cause of Death Registry (2013-2018, = 66,534). We described direct medical costs and utilization of cancer treatment in hospitals (in-patient stays and out-patient clinics) and specialized palliative home care teams by the means of the following variables: gender, type of cancer, age, region of residence, place of death, and use of pharmaceutical anti-cancer treatment last month before death. Generalized linear models with a gamma distribution and log-link function were fitted to identify determinants of direct medical costs in hospital's last year of life.
Women aged 0-69 years had an average direct medical cost in hospitals of €26,117 during the last year of life, compared to €29,540 for men, while they were respectively €19,889 and €22,405 for those aged 70 years or older. These gender differences were confirmed in regression models with gender as the only covariate. Adjusted additionally for the type of cancer, the difference was 11%, while including age as a covariate reduced the difference to 6%. When the place of death was also included, the difference was down to 4%.
The gender difference in hospital costs last year of life can largely be explained by age at death and the proportion dying in hospitals. When adjusting for confounding factors, the differences in end-of-life costs in hospitals are minimal.
医疗保健系统的一个重要目标是公平获得医疗保健。然而,先前的研究表明,男性比女性接受更多的癌症护理和医疗保健资源。本研究的目的是调查在挪威医院临终癌症治疗方面是否存在性别差异。
我们使用了来自挪威患者登记处(2013-2017 年, = 64694 例)的全国性患者水平数据,以及来自挪威死因登记处(2013-2018 年, = 66534 例)的汇总数据。我们通过以下变量描述了医院(住院和门诊诊所)和专门的姑息治疗家庭护理团队中癌症治疗的直接医疗费用和利用情况:性别、癌症类型、年龄、居住地区、死亡地点以及死亡前一个月使用的抗癌药物治疗。使用具有伽马分布和对数链接函数的广义线性模型来确定生命最后一年医院直接医疗费用的决定因素。
0-69 岁的女性在生命最后一年在医院的平均直接医疗费用为 26117 欧元,而男性为 29540 欧元,而 70 岁或以上的女性和男性分别为 19889 欧元和 22405 欧元。在仅将性别作为协变量的回归模型中,证实了这些性别差异。此外,调整癌症类型后,差异为 11%,而将年龄作为协变量后,差异缩小至 6%。当还包括死亡地点时,差异降至 4%。
生命最后一年医院费用的性别差异在很大程度上可以通过死亡时的年龄和在医院死亡的比例来解释。在调整混杂因素后,医院临终成本的差异极小。