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End-of-Life Care Patterns shift for patients
with Heart Failure in both U.S. and Canada
Newswise, October 2010 — Health care in the
last six months of life has become
progressively more expensive for patients
with heart failure both among Medicare
beneficiaries in the United States and older
adults in Canada, with a high rate of
hospitalizations in the final six months of
life in both countries, according to two
reports posted online .
A third report finds that more men dying of
prostate cancer are receiving hospice care,
but that the timing of hospice referral
remains poor.
Heart failure is a common cause of death in
both the United States and Canada, according
to background information in the articles.
The condition is listed on one in eight
death certificates in the United States, and
the five-year death rate among those
hospitalized with heart failure is about 70
percent.
“Provision of high-quality health care at
the end of life poses challenges for both
health care providers and policy makers,”
the authors write.
“End-of-life care has many dimensions,
including patient preferences and values,
health care provider practices and concerns
about the appropriate use of resources.
“Although most patients prefer to die at
home, many die in hospitals or nursing
homes. The cost of health care at the end of
life is also substantial. More than
one-quarter of Medicare spending occurs in
the last year of life, a figure that has
remained stable for several decades.”
In one article, Kathleen T. Unroe, M.D.,
M.H.A., of Duke Clinical Research Institute,
Durham, N.C., and colleagues studied 229,543
Medicare beneficiaries with heart failure
who died between 2000 and 2007. They
examined resource use in the last six months
of life and calculated costs to Medicare.
Over the entire study period, about 80
percent of patients were hospitalized in the
last six months of life.
Between 2000 and 2007, days in the intensive
care unit increased from 3.5 to 4.6, hospice
use increased from 19 percent to nearly 40
percent of patients and unadjusted average
costs to Medicare per patient increased 26
percent from $28,766 to $36,216. After
adjusting for age, sex, race, co-occurring
medical conditions and region, costs
increased by 11 percent.
Older patients tended to have lower costs,
while those with kidney disease, lung
disease or who were black were more likely
to have higher costs.
The trend of increasing hospice use marks a
substantial change in end-of-life care, the
authors note.
“Some studies have found hospice care to be
more cost-effective than nonhospice care,
but we did not observe lower use of other
services as the use of hospice increased,”
they write.
“Rates of inpatient hospitalization remained
high, suggesting that the potential for
hospice to prevent costly hospitalizations
has yet to be fully realized.”
In another article, Padma Kaul, Ph.D., of
the University of Alberta, Edmonton,
Alberta, Canada, and colleagues evaluated
data from 33,144 patients in Canada who died
of heart failure between 2000 and 2006. They
also assessed resource use in the last six
months of life along with costs to the
national health care system, as Canada has a
single-payer system with universal access.
The percentage of patients who were
hospitalized during the last six months of
life decreased over the study period, from
84 percent to 76 percent, as did the
percentage of patients dying in the hospital
(from 60 percent to 54 percent).
However, patients who died in later years
were substantially more likely to receive
outpatient care in the last six months of
life (52.8 percent in 2000 vs. 69.8 percent
in 2006), and the average number of visits
among those receiving such care increased
from 6.4 to 7.7.
In 2006, the average end-of-life cost was
$27,983 in Canadian dollars. “Costs in the
last six months of life among patients who
died in hospital were more than double those
for patients who did not,” $38,279 vs.
$15,905, the authors write.
“The substantial impact of location of death
on costs can be illustrated as follows:
reducing the number of hospital deaths by 10
percent in 2006 would have saved the health
care system approximately $11 million (486
patients multiplied by mean cost savings of
$22,374 per patient).”
“Increasing the availability of alternative
venues of care, such as long-term care and
home care, may be effective in further
reducing hospitalizations and containing
costs,” they conclude.
In a third article, Jonathan Bergman, M.D.,
of the University of California, Los
Angeles, and colleagues linked data from
Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results
cancer registries to Medicare data to
identify 14,521 men dying of prostate cancer
in the United States between 1992 and 2005.
Overall, 7,646 of the men (53 percent) had
used hospice, for a median (midpoint) of 24
days.
African Americans and those with more
co-occurring illnesses were less likely to
use hospice, whereas having a partner and
dying more recently were associated with
greater use. Men who enrolled in hospice
were less likely to receive high-intensity
care, including admission to the intensive
care unit, inpatient stays and multiple
emergency department visits.
Although hospice use increased over time,
almost one-third of patients enrolled in
hospice within seven days of death or more
than 180 days before dying. “Hospice stays
shorter than seven days are too brief to
maximize the benefit of enrollment, and
individuals making shorter stays receive
fewer services and benefit less from the
input of the full interdisciplinary team,”
the authors write. “At the other end of the
spectrum, the Medicare hospice benefit
requires that a primary care physician and a
hospice medical director certify that an
individual’s expected prognosis does not
exceed 180 days when he or she is enrolled
in hospice.”
“Increasing appropriate hospice use may
improve the quality of death for men at the
end of life while rationalizing health care
expenditures during this high-cost period,”
they conclude.
Editor’s Note: Please see the articles for
additional information, including other
authors, author contributions and
affiliations, financial disclosures, funding
and support, etc.
Editorial: Palliative Care Essential to
Properly Treat Patients at the End of Life
“Countries around the world expend
substantial resources to relieve the
suffering caused by the burden of disease,”
writes Rosemary Gibson, M.Sc., in an
accompanying editorial. “Three articles
published Online First in the Archives
examine health care at the end of life.”
“Conversations that allow the patient to
describe what is important as he or she
lives life with serious illness or near
life’s end should be paramount in guiding
the course of treatment,” Ms. Gibson writes.
“High-quality palliative care—provided in
hospitals, nursing homes, at home or in
hospice—can help patients understand their
illness and make informed decisions about
their care, together with their families. It
must be integrated into the care of patients
in all settings.”
“Only with the explicit goal of relieving
the burden of illness, and relieving the
burden of treatment, will health care
systems fulfill their intended purpose of
caring for the patient.”
(Arch Intern Medicine. Published online
October 11, 2010.
doi:10.1001/archinternmed.2010.360.
Available pre-embargo to the media at
www.jamamedia.org.)
Editor’s Note: Ms. Gibson led the Robert
Wood Johnson Foundation’s strategy to
improve end-of-life care for more than a
decade and is the author of two books.
Please see the article for additional
information, including author contributions
and affiliations, financial disclosures,
funding and support, etc.