Barriers of acceptance to hospice care : a randomized vignette-based experiment

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TRANDEL, Elizabeth T. | LOWERS, Jane | BANNON, Megan E. | MOREINES, Laura T. | DELLON, Elisabeth P. | WHITE, Patrick | CROSS, Sarah H. | QUEST, Tammie E. | LAGNESE, Keith | KRISHNAMURTI, Tamar | ARNOLD, Robert M. | HARRISON, Krista L. | PATZER, Rachel E. | WANG, Li | ZARRABI, Ali John | KAVALIERATOS, Dio

Background: The per diem financial structure of hospice care may lead agencies to consider patient-level factors when weighing admissions. Objective: To investigate if treatment cost, disease complexity, and diagnosis are associated with hospice willingness to accept patients. Design: In this 2019 online survey study, individuals involved in hospice admissions decisions were randomized to view one of six hypothetical patient vignettes: "high-cost, high-complexity," "low-cost, high-complexity," and "low-cost, low-complexity" within two diseases: heart failure and cystic fibrosis. Vignettes included demographics, prognoses, goals, and medications with costs. Respondents indicated their perceived likelihood of acceptance to their hospice; if likelihood was <100%, respondents were asked the barriers to acceptance. We used bivariate tests to examine associations between demographic, clinical, and organizational factors and likelihood of acceptance. Participants: Individuals involved in hospice admissions decisions MAIN Measures: Likelihood of acceptance to hospice care KEY RESULTS: N=495 (76% female, 53% age 45-64). Likelihoods of acceptance in cystic fibrosis were 79.8% (high-cost, high-complexity), 92.4% (low-cost, high-complexity), and 91.5% (low-cost, low-complexity), and in heart failure were 65.9% (high-cost, high-complexity), 87.3% (low-cost, high-complexity), and 96.6% (low-cost, low-complexity). For both heart failure and cystic fibrosis, respondents were less likely to accept the high-cost, high-complexity patient than the low-cost, high-complexity patient (65.9% vs. 87.3%, 79.8% vs. 92.4%, both p<0.001). For heart failure, respondents were less likely to accept the low-cost, high-complexity patient than the low-cost, low-complexity patient (87.3% vs. 96.6%, p=0.004). Treatment cost was the most common barrier for 5 of 6 vignettes. Conclusions: This study suggests that patients receiving expensive and/or complex treatments for palliation may have difficulty accessing hospice.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11606-022-07468-7

Voir la revue «Journal of general internal medicine, 38»

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