» Articles » PMID: 30287262

Rehabilitation Therapy for Nursing Home Residents at the End-of-Life

Overview
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty General Medicine
Date 2018 Oct 6
PMID 30287262
Citations 8
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Objective: Ultrahigh therapy use has increased in SNFs without concomitant increases in residents' characteristics. It has been suggested that this trend may also have influenced the provision of high-intensity rehabilitation therapies to residents who are at the end of life (EOL). Motivated by lack of evidence, we examined therapy use and intensity among long-stay EOL residents.

Design: An observational study covering a time period 2012-2016.

Setting And Participants: New York State nursing homes (N = 647) and their long-stay decedent residents (N = 55,691).

Methods: Data sources included Minimum Data Set assessments, vital statistics, Nursing Home Compare website, LTCfocus, and Area Health Resource File. Therapy intensity in the last month of life was the outcome measure. Individual-level covariates were used to adjust for health conditions. Facility-level covariates were the key independent variables of interest. Multinomial logistic regression models with facility random effects were estimated.

Results: Overall, 13.6% (n = 7600) of long-stay decedent residents had some therapy in the last month of life, 0% to 45% across facilities. Of those, almost 16% had very high/ultrahigh therapy intensity (>500 minutes) prior to death. Adjusting for individual-level covariates, decedents in the for-profit facilities had 18% higher risk of low/medium therapy [relative risk ratio (RRR) = 1.182, P < .001], and more than double the risk of high/ultrahigh therapy (RRR = 2.126, P < .001), compared to those with no therapy use in the last month of life. In facilities with higher physical therapy staffing, decedents had higher risk (RRR = 16.180, P = .002) of high/ultrahigh therapy, but not of low/medium therapy intensity. The use of high/ultrahigh therapy in this population has increased over time.

Conclusions And Relevance: This is a first study to empirically demonstrate that facility characteristics are associated with the provision of therapy intensity to EOL residents. Findings suggest that facilities with a for-profit mission, and with higher staffing of therapists, may be more incentivized to maximize therapy use, even among the sickest of the residents.

Citing Articles

Allied health in residential aged care: Using routinely collected data to improve funding opportunities.

Meulenbroeks I, Seaman K, Raban M, Westbrook J Australas J Ageing. 2022; 42(1):221-224.

PMID: 36069478 PMC: 10946826. DOI: 10.1111/ajag.13136.


Post-acute care transitions and outcomes among Medicare beneficiaries with dementia: Associations with race/ethnicity and dual status.

Temkin-Greener H, Yan D, Cai S Health Serv Res. 2022; 58(1):164-173.

PMID: 36054521 PMC: 9836959. DOI: 10.1111/1475-6773.14059.


Therapy-based allied health delivery in residential aged care, trends, factors, and outcomes: a systematic review.

Meulenbroeks I, Raban M, Seaman K, Westbrook J BMC Geriatr. 2022; 22(1):712.

PMID: 36031624 PMC: 9420184. DOI: 10.1186/s12877-022-03386-9.


Implementing Primary Palliative Care in Post-acute nursing home care: Protocol for an embedded pilot pragmatic trial.

Carpenter J, Hanson L, Hodgson N, Murray A, Hippe D, Polissar N Contemp Clin Trials Commun. 2021; 23:100822.

PMID: 34381919 PMC: 8340123. DOI: 10.1016/j.conctc.2021.100822.


Impact of the Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) Program Maturity Status on the Nursing Home Resident's Place of Death.

Tark A, Agarwal M, Dick A, Song J, Stone P Am J Hosp Palliat Care. 2020; 38(7):812-822.

PMID: 32878457 PMC: 7925705. DOI: 10.1177/1049909120956650.


References
1.
Cai S, Mukamel D, Veazie P, Katz P, Temkin-Greener H . Hospitalizations in nursing homes: does payer source matter? Evidence from New York State. Med Care Res Rev. 2011; 68(5):559-78. PMC: 3374862. DOI: 10.1177/1077558711399581. View

2.
Ouslander J, Lamb G, Perloe M, Givens J, Kluge L, Rutland T . Potentially avoidable hospitalizations of nursing home residents: frequency, causes, and costs: [see editorial comments by Drs. Jean F. Wyman and William R. Hazzard, pp 760-761]. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2010; 58(4):627-35. DOI: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2010.02768.x. View

3.
Temkin-Greener H, Zheng N, Xing J, Mukamel D . Site of death among nursing home residents in the United States: changing patterns, 2003-2007. J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2013; 14(10):741-8. PMC: 3744590. DOI: 10.1016/j.jamda.2013.03.009. View

4.
Miller S, Lima J, Mitchell S . Influence of hospice on nursing home residents with advanced dementia who received Medicare-skilled nursing facility care near the end of life. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2012; 60(11):2035-41. PMC: 3498606. DOI: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2012.04204.x. View

5.
Thomas K, Dosa D, Wysocki A, Mor V . The Minimum Data Set 3.0 Cognitive Function Scale. Med Care. 2015; 55(9):e68-e72. PMC: 4567556. DOI: 10.1097/MLR.0000000000000334. View