Supply-side differences only modestly associated with inpatient hospitalizations among medicare beneficiaries in the last 6 months of life

Article indépendant

CROUCH, Elizabeth | PROBST, Janice C. | BENNETT, Kevin J. | HARDIN, James W.

CONTEXT: Inpatient hospitalizations are a driver of expenditures at the end of life and are a useful proxy for the intensity of care at that time. OBJECTIVES: Our study profiled rural and urban Medicare decedents to examine whether they differed in rates of inpatient hospital admissions in the last 6 months of life. METHODS: Using a sample of 35,831 beneficiaries from the 2013 Medicare Research Identifiable Files, we examined inpatient hospital utilization patterns for a full 6 months before death. Supply-side variables included the number of hospital beds, certified skilled nursing facility beds, and hospice beds per 1,000 residents, plus primary care provider/population ratios. Patient characteristics included age, sex, race/ethnicity, dual eligibility status, region, and chronic conditions. RESULTS: In both adjusted and unadjusted analysis, rural versus urban residence was not associated with an increased risk for hospitalization at the end of life among Medicare beneficiaries, nor was there a relationship between the supply of hospital, skilled nursing, and hospice services and the rate of hospitalization. Within rural residents alone, modest effects were found for facility supply. Rural residents in a county without a hospital were slightly less likely than other rural decedents to have been hospitalized during their last 6 months of life but were no less likely to have utilized skilled nursing facilities or hospice. CONCLUSIONS: The absence of major disparities in utilization suggests that end-of-life care is reasonably equitable for rural Medicare beneficiaries.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2017.06.002

Voir la revue «JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT, 54»

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