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National
Hospice Study reveals gaps in service
Newswise — More than a
third of Americans now die under the care of
a hospice service, a huge increase from just
a decade ago and a major advance in
end-of-life care.
But a new University of
Michigan study reveals major gaps in the
availability of hospice care across the
country – gaps that the researchers
attribute directly to the way hospice care
is currently funded in America.
Most strikingly, the
study finds that communities with lower
average incomes and education levels, and
areas with large concentrations of elderly
people, are far less likely to be served by
a hospice than communities with wealthier,
more educated and younger populations.
In an oral presentation
Friday at the Society for General Internal
Medicine meeting, U-M Medical School and VA
researcher Maria Silveira, M.D., M.P.H.,
shared findings from an analysis that
combined national Medicare data on hospices
and federal county-level 2000 Census data in
a sophisticated computer model.
The resulting map of
the United States looks like a blotchy
patchwork, with very high hospice
availability in the Northeast, upper Midwest
and much of California, lesser availability
in states along the Mississippi and in the
Rocky Mountain states and desert Southwest,
and much lower-than-average availability
across much of the South, Texas, Florida and
the Plains states. There was wide variation
within regions.
On average, the study
found, counties have 2.1 hospices located
within their borders, but the number ranges
from none to 125. When the researchers
looked at 60-mile-radius service areas — the
range recommended by the National Hospice
and Palliative Care Organization — the
average number of hospices serving a county
was just over 52. But it ranged widely –
from none to 280.
When the researchers
analyzed factors that associated with the
availability of hospice, they found that the
county’s average income, education level and
percentage of residents over age 65 were the
factors that most strongly determined how
much hospice would be available to
residents.
For example, the more
households with incomes over $100,000, or
residents who held at least a high school
diploma, the better the access to hospice.
But surprisingly, the higher the percentage
of older residents, the lower the
availability of hospice.
Although the dramatic
differences revealed by the analysis
surprised Silveira and her colleagues, they
strongly suspect they know why hospice
availability varies so much.
Relying on the ability
of patients or their families to pay for
care and services that aren’t covered by
Medicare or other insurance — and counting
on charity and volunteers to make ends meet
— means that hospices are most likely to
flourish in areas where incomes are highest,
she explains.
“Since 1982, Medicare has paid for hospice,
and now pays for the vast majority of such
care provided in the U.S. But it only
reimburses 70 percent of the cost for
certain services, and hospices must make up
the difference in out-of-pocket charges,
charity donations and volunteerism,” she
says. “Also, nursing homes, which care for
many elderly people, currently have little
incentive to offer hospice services.”
The disparities seen in
the new analysis will only fade if there are
changes in the way hospices are built and
reimbursed for their care, says Silveira, an
assistant professor of internal medicine at
U-M and a member of the Health Service
Research & Development Center of Excellence
at the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System.
And that, in turn,
could erase the differences in hospice use
that have been reported nationwide by other
researchers.
To make hospice more
available to more people, Medicare would
have to subsidize the building of new
hospices in under-served areas, and
reimburse hospices for more of the actual
costs of the care they provide, Silveira
explains. Private donors to hospices could
also be encouraged to give to support the
extension of hospice services to
under-served areas.
At the same time, the
survival of a hospice also depends on
referrals from physicians who are familiar
with hospice and what services are available
in the area, as well as willingness on the
part of patients or families who know what
hospice is and how it differs from
traditional end-of-life care. Both of these
factors are related to education level and
people’s experience with hospice.
Even though hospice has
been around for decades, the concept is
still unfamiliar or vaguely understood by
many people, Silveira notes.
In general, hospices
strive to offer high-quality and
compassionate care for patients who have an
illness or injury that is limiting their
life expectancy, no matter what their age.
They provide medical care, pain management
and emotional and spiritual support during
the end-of-life period, aiming for a
pain-free, dignified death. Hospices may
offer services within a freestanding
facility of their own, in a patient’s own
home or within a hospital, nursing home or
long-term-care facility.
“The boom in the
hospice field in the last two decades has
brought increased quality of life and less
suffering and grief to the final days of
millions of people, and may actually help
terminally ill people live slightly longer
than they would have in hospitals,” Silveira
says.
Analyses to date have
not shown that hospice saves money overall,
but it does result in lower hospitalization,
resuscitation and treatment costs.
Despite hospice’s
benefits, previous research has shown that
elderly people, members of minority groups
and people in rural areas are far less
likely to use hospice. The new analysis
probes the reasons why, by looking at
hospice availability using mapping
technology.
The study was funded by
the VA HSR&D Center of Excellence and the
University of Michigan.
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