Department of Health Management and Health Economics, Institute of Health and Society, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Department of Public Health and Nursing, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2022 Oct 1;22(1):1221. doi: 10.1186/s12913-022-08526-w.
Research on end-of-life care is often fragmented, focusing on one level of healthcare or on a particular patient subgroup. Our aim was to describe the complete care pathways of all cancer decedents in Norway during the last six months of life.
We used six national registries linked at patient level and including all cancer decedents in Norway between 2009-2013 to describe patient use of secondary, primary-, and home- and community-based care. We described patient's car pathway, including patients living situation, healthcare utilization, and costs. We then estimated how cancer type, individual and sociodemographic characteristics, and access to informal care influenced the care pathways. Regression models were used depending on the outcome, i.e., negative binomial (for healthcare utilization) and generalized linear models (for healthcare costs).
In total, 52,926 patients were included who died of lung (16%), colorectal (12%), prostate (9%), breast (6%), cervical (1%) or other (56%) cancers. On average, patients spent 123 days at home, 24 days in hospital, 16 days in short-term care and 24 days in long-term care during their last 6 months of life. Healthcare utilization increased towards end-of-life. Total costs were high (on average, NOK 379,801). 60% of the total costs were in the secondary care setting, 3% in the primary care setting, and 37% in the home- and community-based care setting. Age (total cost-range NOK 361,363-418,618) and marital status (total cost-range NOK354,100-411,047) were stronger determining factors of care pathway than cancer type (total cost-range NOK341,318- 392,655). When patients died of cancer types requiring higher amounts of secondary care (e.g., cervical cancer), there was a corresponding lower utilization of primary, and home- and community-based care, and vice versa.
Cancer patient's care pathways at end-of-life are more strongly associated with age and access to informal care than underlying type of cancer. More care in one care setting (e.g., the secondary care) is associated with less care in other settings (primary- and home- and community based care setting) as demonstrated by the substitution between the different levels of care in this study. Care at end-of-life should therefore not be evaluated in one healthcare level alone since this might bias results and lead to suboptimal priorities.
临终关怀研究往往是零散的,侧重于医疗保健的一个层面或特定的患者亚组。我们的目的是描述 2009-2013 年间挪威所有癌症末期患者在生命最后六个月的完整护理路径。
我们使用了六个国家登记处,通过患者层面进行了链接,并包括了挪威所有癌症末期患者,以描述患者对二级、一级、家庭和社区护理的使用情况。我们描述了患者的护理路径,包括患者的居住情况、医疗保健利用情况和费用。然后,我们估计了癌症类型、个人和社会人口统计学特征以及获得非正式护理的情况如何影响护理路径。根据结果使用了回归模型,即负二项式(用于医疗保健利用)和广义线性模型(用于医疗保健费用)。
共纳入 52926 名死于肺癌(16%)、结直肠癌(12%)、前列腺癌(9%)、乳腺癌(6%)、宫颈癌(1%)或其他癌症(56%)的患者。平均而言,患者在生命的最后 6 个月中在家中度过 123 天,在医院度过 24 天,在短期护理中度过 16 天,在长期护理中度过 24 天。医疗保健的利用随着生命的结束而增加。总费用很高(平均为 379801 挪威克朗)。60%的总费用发生在二级保健机构,3%发生在初级保健机构,37%发生在家庭和社区保健机构。年龄(总费用范围为 361363-418618 挪威克朗)和婚姻状况(总费用范围为 354100-411047 挪威克朗)是决定护理路径的比癌症类型(总费用范围为 341318-392655 挪威克朗)更强的因素。当患者死于需要更多二级保健的癌症类型(例如宫颈癌)时,相应地,初级保健和家庭及社区保健的利用减少,反之亦然。
癌症患者临终关怀的护理路径与年龄和获得非正式护理的机会比潜在的癌症类型更密切相关。本研究表明,在不同的护理水平之间存在替代关系,因此,在一个护理环境中(例如二级护理)提供更多的护理与在其他环境中(初级护理和家庭及社区护理环境)提供较少的护理相关。因此,临终关怀不应仅在一个医疗保健层面进行评估,因为这可能会产生偏差并导致次优的优先级。