Greer D S, Mor V, Sherwood S, Morris J N, Birnbaum H
J Chronic Dis. 1983;36(11):737-80. doi: 10.1016/0021-9681(83)90069-3.
Since the founding of the first hospice in the United States in 1974, the number of health care organizations providing hospice services has grown rapidly. In 1978, the U.S. General Accounting Office identified 59 operational hospices [1]. A survey undertaken by the National Hospice Organization (NHO) in 1980 found 235 operational programs and many more actively planning to deliver services. By the summer of 1981, the Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Hospitals (JCAH), in studying the feasibility of a voluntary hospice accreditation program, had 650 responses to a national survey [2]. Finally, the 1981 NHO directory identifies 464 operational "provider programs" as well as 33 functioning state-level hospice organizations with an additional 353 programs in various stages of establishing hospice programs of care [3]. The growth of the movement and the public recognition it has received have catalyzed advocacy of Federal support for hospice services. In 1979, the Congress responded by mandating a study to delineate the implications of inclusion of hospice services in the Medicare program. The Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA) then selected 26 hospices (from an applicant pool of 233) to participate in a two-year experimental program. These demonstration sites receive reimbursement for services provided Medicare beneficiaries not otherwise available under current regulations. The special reimbursement provisions went into effect on October 1, 1980. (See Appendix A: Description of the Hospice Reimbursement Program.) In the spring of 1980, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the John A. Hartford Foundation joined with the Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA) to solicit proposals for a national evaluation of hospice care as a basis for future Federal fiscal policy and legislation. Brown University was selected as the evaluation center by competitive process and the grant was awarded on September 30, 1980. The evaluation employs a quasi-experimental design in which the impact of hospice care (with and without reimbursement) on quality of life and costs are compared to non-hospice (conventional) terminal care. Eight hundred patients and families in 24 comparison sites located in three regional areas (Southern New England, Northern Midwest and Southern California) are expected to participate. Primary data collection began on August 1, 1981. Analyses of differential outcome are performed using standard linear multiple regression and logistic multiple regression with separate models for each comparison group. Effects are tested by separately estimating the specific response variable for the prototype (average) hospice patient for each model.
自1974年美国第一家临终关怀医院成立以来,提供临终关怀服务的医疗保健机构数量迅速增长。1978年,美国总审计局确定了59家运营中的临终关怀医院[1]。1980年,美国国家临终关怀组织(NHO)进行的一项调查发现了235个运营项目,还有更多机构正在积极筹备提供服务。到1981年夏天,医院评审联合委员会(JCAH)在研究自愿性临终关怀医院认证项目的可行性时,收到了对一项全国性调查的650份回复[2]。最后,1981年NHO名录列出了464个运营中的“提供项目”,以及33个运作中的州级临终关怀组织,另有353个处于建立临终关怀护理项目不同阶段的项目[3]。该运动的发展及其获得的公众认可促使人们倡导联邦政府对临终关怀服务提供支持。1979年,国会作出回应,要求进行一项研究,以阐明将临终关怀服务纳入医疗保险计划的影响。医疗保健财务管理局(HCFA)随后从233个申请机构中挑选了26家临终关怀医院(参与一项为期两年的实验项目。这些示范机构为医疗保险受益人提供的服务可获得报销,而这在现行规定下是无法获得的。特殊报销规定于1980年10月1日生效。(见附录A:临终关怀报销项目说明。)1980年春天,罗伯特·伍德·约翰逊基金会和约翰·A·哈特福德基金会与医疗保健财务管理局(HCFA)联合,征集关于对临终关怀护理进行全国评估的提案,作为未来联邦财政政策和立法的依据。布朗大学通过竞争程序被选为评估中心,并于1980年9月30日获得拨款。该评估采用准实验设计,将临终关怀护理(有报销和无报销)对生活质量和成本的影响与非临终关怀(传统)终末期护理进行比较。预计位于三个地区(新英格兰南部、中西部北部和南加州)的24个对照地点的800名患者及其家属将参与。主要数据收集于1981年8月1日开始。使用标准线性多元回归和逻辑多元回归对不同结果进行分析,每个对照组使用单独的模型。通过分别估计每个模型中典型(平均)临终关怀患者的特定反应变量来检验效果。