Dementia's unique burden : function and health care in the last 4 years of life

Article indépendant

BROYLES, Ila Hughes | LI, Qinghua | PALMER, Lauren Martin | DIBELLO, Michael | DEY, Judith | OLIVEIRA, Iara | LAMONT, Helen

Background: Dementia is a terminal illness marked by progressive cognitive decline. This study characterized trajectories of functional status and health care use for people with and without dementia at the end of their life. Methods: We used the Health and Retirement Study linked with Medicare claims to generate a series of generalized linear models. Models predicted functional status and health care use for decedents with and without dementia during each month in the last 4 years of life (48 months). Results: People with dementia have high, sustained functional impairments during the entire last 4 years of life. People with dementia have the same predicted average activities of daily living score (1.92) at 17 months before death (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.857, 1.989) as individuals without dementia at 6 months before death (95% CI: 1.842, 1.991). Dementia was associated with significantly less hospice during the final 3 months of life, with a 12.5% (95% CI: 11.046, 13.906) likelihood of hospice in the last month of life with dementia versus 17.3% (95% CI: 15.573, 18.982) without dementia. Dementia was also associated with less durable medical equipment (p < .001), less home health care (p < .005), and fewer office visits (p < .001). There were not significant differences in likelihood of hospitalization in the last 48 months with or without dementia. Conclusions: People with dementia can functionally appear to be at end of life (EOL) for years before their death. Simultaneously, they receive less health care, particularly home health and hospice, in their last months. Models of care that target people with dementia should consider the unique and sustained burden of dementia at EOL.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gerona/glad003

Voir la revue «The journals of gerontology. Series A, biological sciences and medical sciences»

Autres numéros de la revue «The journals of gerontology. Series A, biological sciences and medical sciences»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Dementia's unique burden : function and healt...

Article indépendant | BROYLES, Ila Hughes | The journals of gerontology. Series A, biological sciences and medical sciences

Background: Dementia is a terminal illness marked by progressive cognitive decline. This study characterized trajectories of functional status and health care use for people with and without dementia at the end of their life. Meth...

Nationwide quality of hospice care : findings...

Article | ZHENG, Nan Tracy | JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT | n°2 | vol.55

BACKGROUND: With increasing use of the Medicare hospice benefit, policymakers recognize the need for quality measurement to assure that terminally ill patients receive high quality care and have the information they need when sele...

Nationwide quality of hospice care : findings...

Article indépendant | ZHENG, Nan Tracy | JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT | n°2 | vol.55

BACKGROUND: With increasing use of the Medicare hospice benefit, policymakers recognize the need for quality measurement to assure that terminally ill patients receive high quality care and have the information they need when sele...

De la même série

"Don't talk to them about goals of care" : un...

Article indépendant | ASHANA, Deepshikha Charan | The journals of gerontology. Series A, biological sciences and medical sciences | n°2 | vol.77

BACKGROUND: Structurally marginalized groups experience disproportionately low rates of advance care planning (ACP). To improve equitable patient-centered end-of-life care, we examine barriers and facilitators to ACP among clinici...

End-of-life orders, resource utilization and ...

Article indépendant | LIN, Amber L. | The journals of gerontology. Series A, biological sciences and medical sciences

Background: Portable Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) are increasingly utilized to assist patients approaching the end of life in documenting goals of care. We evaluated the association of POLST, resource utilization, ...

Determinants of total end-of-life healthcare ...

Article indépendant | LI, Lihua | The journals of gerontology. Series A, biological sciences and medical sciences

BACKGROUND: To identify and rank the importance of key determinants of end-of-life (EOL) healthcare costs, and to understand how the key factors impact different percentiles of the distribution of healthcare costs. METHODS: We app...

Trajectories of frailty in the five years pri...

Article indépendant | WARD, Rachel E. | The journals of gerontology. Series A, biological sciences and medical sciences

BACKGROUND: Electronic frailty indices (eFIs) are increasingly used to identify patients at risk for morbidity and mortality. Whether eFIs capture the spectrum of frailty change, including decline, stability, and improvement is un...

Development of a predictive score for mortali...

Article indépendant | DESCHASSE, Guillaume | The journals of gerontology. Series A, biological sciences and medical sciences

BACKGROUND: There is a need for a mortality score that can be used to trigger advanced care planning among older patients discharged from acute geriatric units (AGUs). OBJECTIVE: To develop a prognostic score for 3- and 12-month m...

Chargement des enrichissements...