College of Nursing, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
Sociology Department, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2024 Jun;72(6):1793-1801. doi: 10.1111/jgs.18770. Epub 2024 Feb 2.
Families play a critical role in end-of-life (EOL) care for nursing home (NH) residents with dementia. Despite the important role of family, little is known about the availability and characteristics of families of persons with dementia who die in NHs.
This is a retrospective cohort study of 18,339 individuals 65 years and older with dementia who died in a Utah NH between 1998 and 2016, linked to their first-degree family (FDF) members (n = 52,566; spouses = 11.3%; children = 58.3%; siblings = 30.3%). Descriptive statistics, chi-square tests, and t-tests were used to describe the study cohort and their FDF members and to compare sociodemographic and death characteristics of NH decedents with (n = 14,398; 78.5%) and without FDF (n = 3941; 21.5%).
Compared with NH decedents with FDF, NH decedents with dementia without FDF members were more likely to be older (mean age 86.5 vs 85.5), female (70.5% vs 59.3%), non-White/Hispanic (9.9% vs 3.2%), divorced/separated/widowed (84.4% vs 61.1%), less educated (<12th grade; 42.2% vs 33.7%), have Medicare and Medicaid (20.8% vs 12.5%), and die in a rural/frontier NH (25.0% vs 23.4%). NH decedents who did not have FDF were also more likely to die from cancer (4.2% vs 3.9%), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD; 3.9% vs 2.5%), and dementia (40.5% vs 38.4%) and were less likely to have 2+ inpatient hospitalizations at EOL (13.9% vs 16.2%), compared with NH decedents with FDF.
Findings highlight differences in social determinants of health (e.g., sex, race, marital status, education, insurance, rurality) between NH decedents with dementia who do and do not have FDF-factors that may influence equity in EOL care. Understanding the role of family availability and familial characteristics on EOL care outcomes for NH residents with dementia is an important next step to informing NH dementia care interventions and health policies.
家庭在疗养院(NH)痴呆患者的临终关怀中起着至关重要的作用。尽管家庭起着重要的作用,但对于在 NH 中死亡的痴呆患者的家庭的可用性和特征知之甚少。
这是一项对 1998 年至 2016 年间在犹他州 NH 中死亡的 18339 名 65 岁及以上患有痴呆症的个体(n=18339;配偶占 11.3%;子女占 58.3%;兄弟姐妹占 30.3%)的回顾性队列研究,与他们的一级亲属(FDF)成员进行了关联(n=52566)。描述性统计、卡方检验和 t 检验用于描述研究队列及其 FDF 成员,并比较有(n=14398;78.5%)和没有 FDF(n=3941;21.5%)的 NH 死亡者的社会人口统计学和死亡特征。
与有 FDF 的 NH 死亡者相比,没有 FDF 的 NH 死亡者痴呆症患者更有可能年龄较大(平均年龄 86.5 岁 vs 85.5 岁)、女性(70.5% vs 59.3%)、非白种人/西班牙裔(9.9% vs 3.2%)、离婚/分居/丧偶(84.4% vs 61.1%)、受教育程度较低(<12 年级;42.2% vs 33.7%)、有医疗保险和医疗补助(20.8% vs 12.5%),并且在农村/边境 NH 中死亡(25.0% vs 23.4%)。没有 FDF 的 NH 死亡者也更有可能死于癌症(4.2% vs 3.9%)、慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD;3.9% vs 2.5%)和痴呆症(40.5% vs 38.4%),并且在临终关怀期间住院治疗的次数少于 2 次(13.9% vs 16.2%),与有 FDF 的 NH 死亡者相比。
研究结果突出了 NH 痴呆症死亡者之间在健康的社会决定因素(例如,性别、种族、婚姻状况、教育、保险、农村)方面存在差异,这些因素可能会影响临终关怀的公平性。了解家庭可用性和家庭特征对 NH 痴呆症居民临终关怀结果的影响,是为 NH 痴呆症护理干预和卫生政策提供信息的重要下一步。