Cenzer Irena, Covinsky Kenneth E, Cross Sarah H, Ankuda Claire K, Hunt Lauren J, Aldridge Melissa D, Harrison Krista L
Division of Geriatrics, University of California, San Francisco.
Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco, California.
JAMA Netw Open. 2025 Mar 3;8(3):e250201. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.0201.
Understanding how wealth influences the end-of-life experience is crucial for improving patient care and policy, particularly with regard to symptom burden.
To examine the prevalence of 12 end-of-life symptoms by wealth categories; the association between wealth and a composite measure of high symptom burden; and whether this association is mediated by multimorbidity, functional impairment, or dementia.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cohort study used data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), a nationally representative survey of older adults in the US, on decedents who died between January 1, 2000, and February 28, 2021, from proxy-reported exit interviews through February 28, 2021. Decedents were HRS participants aged 65 years or older who had completed a core interview within 24 months before death and had a proxy-reported exit interview. The data analysis was performed from October 6, 2023, through November 26, 2024.
Wealth (assets opposed to income) was categorized into low (bottom quartile, <$6000), medium (middle 2 quartiles, $6000-$120 000), and high (top quartile, >$120 000).
The presence of 12 individual end-of-life symptoms and a composite measure of high symptom burden (≥7 symptoms) were analyzed using modified Poisson regression. Mediators included multimorbidity, functional impairment, and dementia. Models were adjusted for age, sex, marital status, race and ethnicity, education, childhood socioeconomic status, HRS proxy respondent relationship, location of death, survey timing, year of death, and private insurance.
Of 8976 decedents (mean [SD] age, 81.3 [8.6] years; 4927 women [55.1%] women) in the cohort, 2197 (22.5%) were included in the low wealth category, 4534 (50.5%) in the medium wealth category, and 2245 (27.1%) in the high wealth category. Decedents with lower wealth had a higher prevalence of end-of-life symptoms. High symptom burden was most common in the low wealth group (800 decedents [37.0%]) vs the medium (1301 decedents [28.0%]) and high wealth (512 decedents [23.2%]) groups. Low wealth was associated with a significantly increased risk of high symptom burden vs medium wealth (adjusted risk ratio, 0.79; 95% CI, 0.73-0.87) and high wealth (adjusted risk ratio, 0.71; 95% CI, 0.63-0.79). Multimorbidity, functional impairment, and dementia were more common in the low wealth group and mediated this association, with functional impairment being the strongest mediator.
This cohort study found that lower wealth was associated with a higher symptom burden at the end of life, mediated in part by higher rates of multimorbidity, functional impairment, and dementia. These findings highlight the need for policies and programs to support patients with lower financial resources to improve end-of-life experiences and mitigate wealth disparities.
了解财富如何影响临终体验对于改善患者护理和政策至关重要,尤其是在症状负担方面。
按财富类别检查12种临终症状的患病率;财富与高症状负担综合指标之间的关联;以及这种关联是否由多种疾病、功能障碍或痴呆介导。
设计、设置和参与者:这项队列研究使用了健康与退休研究(HRS)的数据,这是一项对美国老年人具有全国代表性的调查,数据来自2000年1月1日至2021年2月28日期间去世的死者,通过截至2021年2月28日的代理报告的临终访谈获取。死者为年龄在65岁及以上的HRS参与者,他们在死亡前24个月内完成了核心访谈,并进行了代理报告的临终访谈。数据分析于2023年10月6日至2024年11月26日进行。
财富(资产而非收入)分为低(底部四分位数,<$6000)、中(中间两个四分位数,$6000 - $120000)和高(顶部四分位数,>$120000)。
使用修正泊松回归分析12种个体临终症状的存在情况以及高症状负担综合指标(≥7种症状)。介导因素包括多种疾病、功能障碍和痴呆。模型针对年龄、性别、婚姻状况、种族和民族、教育程度、童年社会经济地位、HRS代理受访者关系、死亡地点、调查时间、死亡年份和私人保险进行了调整。
该队列中的8976名死者(平均[标准差]年龄,81.3[8.6]岁;4927名女性[55.1%])中,2197名(22.5%)属于低财富类别,4534名(50.5%)属于中等财富类别,2245名(27.1%)属于高财富类别。财富较低的死者临终症状患病率较高。高症状负担在低财富组中最为常见(800名死者[37.0%]),而中等财富组(1301名死者[