» Articles » PMID: 22294993

Predictors of Home Care Expenditures and Death at Home for Cancer Patients in an Integrated Comprehensive Palliative Home Care Pilot Program

Overview
Journal Healthc Policy
Specialty Public Health
Date 2012 Feb 2
PMID 22294993
Citations 2
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Purpose: Empirical understanding of predictors for home care service use and death at home is important for healthcare planning. Few studies have examined these predictors in the context of the publicly funded Canadian home care system. This study examined predictors for home care use and home death in the context of a "gold standard" comprehensive palliative home care program pilot in Ontario where patients had equal access to home care services.

Methods: Secondary clinical and administrative data sources were linked using a unique identifier to examine multivariate factors (predisposing, enabling, need) on total home care expenditures and home death for a cohort of cancer patients enrolled in the HPCNet pilot.

Results: SUBJECTS WITH GASTROINTESTINAL SYMPTOMS (OR: 1.64; p=0.03) and those with higher income had increased odds of dying at home (OR: 1.14; p<0.001), whereas age, number of GP visits, gastrointestinal symptoms (i.e., nausea, vomiting, bowel obstruction) and eating problems (i.e., anorexia/cachexia) predicted home care expenditures.

Conclusions: Predictors of home death found in earlier studies appeared less important in this comprehensive palliative home care pilot. An income effect for home death observed in this study requires examination in future controlled studies.

Relevance: Access to palliative home care that is adequately resourced and organized to address the multiple domains of issues that patients/families experience at the end of life has the potential to enable home death and shift care appropriately from limited acute care resources.

Citing Articles

The interaction of socioeconomic status with place of death: a qualitative analysis of physician experiences.

Wales J, Kurahashi A, Husain A BMC Palliat Care. 2018; 17(1):87.

PMID: 29925364 PMC: 6011451. DOI: 10.1186/s12904-018-0341-1.


Dying at home: experience of the Verdun local community service centre.

Kiyanda B, Dechene G, Marchand R Can Fam Physician. 2015; 61(4):e215-8.

PMID: 25873716 PMC: 4396781.

References
1.
Addington-Hall J, McCarthy M . Dying from cancer: results of a national population-based investigation. Palliat Med. 1995; 9(4):295-305. DOI: 10.1177/026921639500900404. View

2.
Brazil K, Bedard M, Willison K . Factors associated with home death for individuals who receive home support services: a retrospective cohort study. BMC Palliat Care. 2002; 1(1):2. PMC: 102334. DOI: 10.1186/1472-684x-1-2. View

3.
Roder D, Bonett A, Hunt R, BEARE M . Where patients with cancer die in South Australia. Med J Aust. 1987; 147(1):11-3. DOI: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.1987.tb133227.x. View

4.
Ng K, von Gunten C . Symptoms and attitudes of 100 consecutive patients admitted to an acute hospice/palliative care unit. J Pain Symptom Manage. 1998; 16(5):307-16. DOI: 10.1016/s0885-3924(98)00097-9. View

5.
Andersen R . Revisiting the behavioral model and access to medical care: does it matter?. J Health Soc Behav. 1995; 36(1):1-10. View