Racial differences in hospice utilisation for heart failure

Article indépendant

GIVENS, Jane L. | TIJA, Jennifer | ZHOU, Chao | EMANUEL, Ezekiel | ASH, Arlene S.

Background: Heart failure is the leading noncancer diagnosis for patients in hospice care and the leading cause of hospitalization among Medicare beneficiaries. Racial and ethnic differences in hospice patients are well documented for patients with cancer but poorly described for those with heart failure. Methods: On the basis of a national sample of 98 258 Medicare beneficiaries 66 years and older on January 1, 2001, with a diagnosis of heart failure who had at least 1 physician or hospital encounter and who were not enrolled in hospice care between January 1 and December 31, 2000, we determined the effect of race and ethnicity on hospice entry for patients with heart failure in 2001 after adjusting for sociodemographic, clinical, and geographic factors. Results: In unadjusted analysis, blacks (odds ratio [OR], 0.52) and Hispanics (0.43) used hospice care for heart failure less than whites. Racial and ethnic differences in patients who received hospice care for heart failure persisted after adjusting for markers of income, urbanicity, severity of illness, local density of hospice use, and medical comorbidity (adjusted OR for blacks, 0.59; 95% confidence interval, 0.47-0.73; and adjusted OR for Hispanics, 0.49; 95% confidence interval, 0.37-0.66; compared with whites). Advanced age, greater comorbidity, emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and greater local density of hospice use were also associated with hospice use. Conclusions: In a national sample of Medicare beneficiaries with heart failure, blacks and Hispanics used hospice care for heart failure less than whites after adjustment for individual and market factors. To understand the mechanisms underlying these findings, further examination of patient preferences and physician referral behavior is needed.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/archinternmed.2009.547

Voir la revue «Archives of internal medicine, 170»

Autres numéros de la revue «Archives of internal medicine»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Racial differences in hospice utilisation for...

Article indépendant | GIVENS, Jane L. | Archives of internal medicine | n°5 | vol.170

Background: Heart failure is the leading noncancer diagnosis for patients in hospice care and the leading cause of hospitalization among Medicare beneficiaries. Racial and ethnic differences in hospice patients are well documented...

Advance directives among nursing home residen...

Article indépendant | TJIA, Jennifer | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°1 | vol.21

OBJECTIVE: To describe prevalence and content of AD documentation among NH residents by dementia stage. BACKGROUND: The prevalence of advance directives (ADs) among nursing home (NH) residents with mild, moderate, and advanced dem...

Advance directives among nursing home residen...

Article indépendant | TJIA, Jennifer | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°1 | vol.21

OBJECTIVE: To describe prevalence and content of AD documentation among NH residents by dementia stage. BACKGROUND: The prevalence of advance directives (ADs) among nursing home (NH) residents with mild, moderate, and advanced dem...

De la même série

Continuous deep sedation until death in Belgi...

Article indépendant | CHAMBAERE, Kenneth | Archives of internal medicine | n°5 | vol.170

Les auteurs ont étudié la prévalence des sédations profondes et continues jusqu'à la mort dans les Flandres en Belgique entre les années 2001 et 2007.

Racial differences in hospice utilisation for...

Article indépendant | GIVENS, Jane L. | Archives of internal medicine | n°5 | vol.170

Background: Heart failure is the leading noncancer diagnosis for patients in hospice care and the leading cause of hospitalization among Medicare beneficiaries. Racial and ethnic differences in hospice patients are well documented...

Abandonment at the end of life from patient, ...

Article indépendant | BACK, Anthony L. | Archives of internal medicine | n°5 | vol.169

Les enquêtes et anecdotes suggèrent que les patients et leurs familles se sentent parfois abandonnés par leur médecin lors du passage vers les soins palliatifs. L'étude présentée dans cet article est une des premières études quali...

Changed patterns in Dutch palliative sedation...

Article indépendant | HASSELAAR, Jeroen G. J. | Archives of internal medicine | n°5 | vol.169

Background: Continuous sedation, contrary to euthanasia, has been increasingly accepted among medical professionals worldwide. In the Netherlands, a national guideline for continuous palliative sedation has been developed to contr...

Circumstances of death in hospitalized patien...

Article indépendant | FERRAND, Edouard | Archives of internal medicine | n°8 | vol.168

Cette étude multicentrique dite "étude Maho" pour Mort à l'hôpital explore les conditions et circonstances de la mort des patients hospitalisés en France. Deux cent hôpitaux ont contribué à l'étude. Les chercheurs se sont intéress...

Chargement des enrichissements...