Physician continuity of care in the last year of life in community-dwelling adults : retrospective population-based study

Article indépendant

HOWARD, Michelle | HAFID, Shuaib | ISENBERG, Sarina Roslyn | WEBBER, Colleen | DOWNAR, James | GAYOWSKY, Anastasia | JONES, Aaron | SCOTT, Mary M. | HSU, Amy T. | CONEN, Katrin | MANUEL, Doug | TANUSEPUTRO, Peter

OBJECTIVE: To describe the timing of involvement of various physician specialties over the last year of life across different levels of primary care physician continuity for differing causes of death. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective cohort study of adults who died in Ontario, Canada, between 1 January 2013 and 31 December 2018, using linked population level health administrative data. Outcomes were median days between death and first and last outpatient palliative care specialist encounter, last outpatient encounter with other specialists and with the usual primary care physician. These were calculated by tertile of score on the Usual Provider Continuity Index, defined as the proportion of outpatient physician encounters with the patient's primary care physician. RESULTS: Patients’ (n=395 839) mean age at death was 76 years. With increasing category of usual primary care physician continuity, a larger proportion were palliative care generalists, palliative care specialist involvement decreased in duration and was concentrated closer to death, the primary care physician was involved closer to death, and other specialist physicians ceased involvement earlier. For patients with cancer, palliative care specialist involvement was longer than for other patients. CONCLUSIONS: Compared with patients with lower continuity, those with higher usual provider continuity were more likely to have a primary care physician involved closer to death providing generalist palliative care.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/spcare-2023-004357

Voir la revue «BMJ supportive & palliative care»

Autres numéros de la revue «BMJ supportive & palliative care»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

End-of-life interventions in patients with ca...

Article indépendant | WEBBER, Colleen | BMJ supportive & palliative care

OBJECTIVES: To describe variations in the receipt of potentially inappropriate interventions in the last 100 days of life of patients with cancer according to patient characteristics and cancer site. METHODS: We conducted a popula...

End-of-life interventions in patients with ca...

Article indépendant | WEBBER, Colleen | BMJ supportive & palliative care

OBJECTIVES: To describe variations in the receipt of potentially inappropriate interventions in the last 100 days of life of patients with cancer according to patient characteristics and cancer site. METHODS: We conducted a popula...

End-of-life care among patients with kidney f...

Article | HAFID, Shuaib | Canadian journal of kidney health and disease | vol.11

BACKGROUND: Nephrologists routinely provide end-of-life care for patients with kidney failure (KF) on maintenance dialysis. Involvement of primary care and palliative care physicians may enhance this experience. OBJECTIVE: The obj...

De la même série

Intersectionality factors and equitable end-o...

Article indépendant | HUDSON, Briony F. | BMJ supportive & palliative care | n°e3 | vol.14

BACKGROUND: Efforts to minimise inequity in palliative and end-of-life care (PEoLC) are well-researched. This is frequently explained by differences related to singular factors. The concept of intersectionality recognises that the...

3d printing in palliative medicine : systemat...

Article indépendant | KERMAVNAR, Tjaša | BMJ supportive & palliative care | n°e3 | vol.14

BACKGROUND: Three-dimensional printing (3DP) enables the production of highly customised, cost-efficient devices in a relatively short time, which can be particularly valuable to clinicians treating patients with palliative care i...

Deep continuous patient-requested sedation un...

Article indépendant | SEREY, Adrien | BMJ supportive & palliative care | n°1 | vol.13

OBJECTIVES: In 2016, a new law was adopted in France granting patients the right, under specific conditions, to continuous deep sedation until death (CDSUD). The goal of this study was to measure the frequency of requests for CDSU...

Rehabilitation medicine in palliative care of...

Article indépendant | NAIR, Krishnan P. S. | BMJ supportive & palliative care | n°2 | vol.13

BACKGROUND: People living with long-term neurological conditions (LTNC) often require palliative care. Rehabilitation medicine specialists often coordinate the long-term care of these patients. OBJECTIVE: The aim of the present re...

Dealing with cultural diversity in palliative...

Article indépendant | SIX, Stefaan | BMJ supportive & palliative care | n°1 | vol.13

Palliative care is increasingly confronted with cultural diversity. This can lead to various problems in practice. In this perspective article, the authors discuss in more detail which issues play a role in culture-sensitive palli...

Chargement des enrichissements...