Socioeconomic position and use of hospital-based care towards the end of life : a mediation analysis using the English longitudinal study of ageing

Article indépendant

DAVIES, Joanna M. | MADDOCKS, Matthew | CHUA, Kia-Chong | DEMAKAKOS, Panayotes | SLEEMAN, Katherine E. | MURTAGH, Fliss E. M.

BACKGROUND: Many patients prefer to avoid hospital-based care towards the end of life, yet hospitalisation is common and more likely for people with low socioeconomic position. The reasons underlying this socioeconomic inequality are not well understood. This study investigated health, service access, and social support as potential mediating pathways between socioeconomic position and receipt of hospital-based care towards the end of life. METHODS: For this observational cohort study, we included deceased participants from the nationally representative English Longitudinal Study of Ageing of people aged 50 years or older in England. We used a multiple mediation model with age-adjusted and gender-adjusted probit regression to estimate the direct effect of socioeconomic position (measured by wealth and education) on death in hospital and three or more hospital admissions in the last 2 years of life, and the indirect effects of socioeconomic position via three mediators: health and function, access to health-care services, and social support. FINDINGS: 737 participants were included (314 [42·6%] female, 423 [57·4%] male), with a median age at death of 78 years (IQR 71-85). For death in hospital, higher wealth had a direct negative effect (probit coefficient -0·16, 95% CI -0·25 to -0·06), which was not mediated by any of the pathways tested. For frequent hospital admissions, health and function mediated the effect of wealth (-0·04, -0·08 to -0·01), accounting for 34·6% of the total negative effect of higher wealth (-0·13, -0·23 to -0·02). Higher wealth was associated with better health and function (0·25, 0·18 to 0·33). Education was associated with the outcomes only indirectly via wealth. INTERPRETATION: Our findings suggest that worse health and function could partly explain why people with lower wealth have more hospital admissions, highlighting the importance of socioeconomically driven health differences in explaining patterns of hospital use towards the end of life. The findings should raise awareness about the related risk factors of low wealth and worse health for patients approaching the end of life, and strengthen calls for resource allocation to be made on the basis of health need and socioeconomic profile. FUNDING: Dunhill Medical Trust Fellowship Grant (RTF74/0116).

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2468-2667(20)30292-9

Voir la revue «The Lancet. Public health, 6»

Autres numéros de la revue «The Lancet. Public health»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Socioeconomic position and use of hospital-ba...

Article | DAVIES, Joanna M. | The Lancet. Public health | n°3 | vol.6

BACKGROUND: Many patients prefer to avoid hospital-based care towards the end of life, yet hospitalisation is common and more likely for people with low socioeconomic position. The reasons underlying this socioeconomic inequality ...

Socioeconomic position and use of hospital-ba...

Article indépendant | DAVIES, Joanna M. | The Lancet. Public health | n°3 | vol.6

BACKGROUND: Many patients prefer to avoid hospital-based care towards the end of life, yet hospitalisation is common and more likely for people with low socioeconomic position. The reasons underlying this socioeconomic inequality ...

How good are we at reporting the socioeconomi...

Article indépendant | SELVAKUMARAN, Keerthika | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE

There is social inequality in palliative and end-of-life care; people with lower socioeconomic position, from ethnic minorities and from other marginalised groups tend to experience worse care and outcomes towards the end of life,...

De la même série

Geographical and socioeconomic disparities in...

Article indépendant | GOODMAN-MEZA, David | The Lancet. Public health | n°2 | vol.6

BACKGROUND: In 2015, Mexico implemented regulatory changes and an electronic system to improve access to prescription opioids. We aimed to investigate trends in opioid dispensing after the implementation of these changes and asses...

Socioeconomic position and use of hospital-ba...

Article indépendant | DAVIES, Joanna M. | The Lancet. Public health | n°3 | vol.6

BACKGROUND: Many patients prefer to avoid hospital-based care towards the end of life, yet hospitalisation is common and more likely for people with low socioeconomic position. The reasons underlying this socioeconomic inequality ...

What mediates end-of-life care choices?

Article indépendant | BLOOMER, Melissa J. | The Lancet. Public health | n°3 | vol.6

In The Lancet Public Health, Joanna Davies and colleagues examine the relationship between socioeconomic position and receipt of hospital-based care towards the end of life for older people, showing that lower wealth is associated...

End-of-life care among patients with schizoph...

Article indépendant | FOND, Guillaume | The Lancet. Public health | n°11 | vol.4

BACKGROUND: Patients with schizophrenia represent a vulnerable, underserved, and undertreated population who have been neglected in health disparities work. Understanding of end-of-life care in patients with schizophrenia and canc...

Chargement des enrichissements...