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- Title
Association Between the Medicare Hospice Benefit and Health Care Utilization and Costs for Patients With Poor-Prognosis Cancer.
- Authors
Obermeyer, Ziad; Makar, Maggie; Abujaber, Samer; Dominici, Francesca; Block, Susan; Cutler, David M.
- Abstract
IMPORTANCE More patients with cancer use hospice currently than ever before, but there are indications that care intensity outside of hospice is increasing, and length of hospice stay decreasing. Uncertainties regarding how hospice affects health care utilization and costs have hampered efforts to promote it. OBJECTIVE To compare utilization and costs of health care for patients with poor-prognosis cancers enrolled in hospice vs similar patients without hospice care. DESIGN, SETTING. AND PARTICIPANTS Matched cohort study of patients in hospice and nonhospice care using a nationally representative 20% sample of Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries who died in 2011. Patients with poor-prognosis cancers (eg, brain, pancreatic, metastatic malignancies) enrolled in hospice before death were matched to similar patients who died without hospice care. EXPOSURES Period between hospice enrollment and death for hospice beneficiaries, and the equivalent period of nonhospice care before death for matched nonhospice patients. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Health care utilization including hospitalizations and procedures, place of death, cost trajectories before and after hospice start, and cumulative costs, all during the last year of life. RESULTS Among 86 851 patients with poor-prognosis cancers, median time from first poor-prognosis diagnosis to death was 13 months (interquartile range [IQR], 3-34), and 51 924 (60%) entered hospice before death. Matching yielded a cohort balanced on age, sex, region, time from poor-prognosis diagnosis to death, and baseline care utilization, with 18 165 patients in the hospice group and 18165 in the nonhospice group. After matching, 11% of nonhospice and 1% of hospice beneficiaries who had cancer-directed therapy after exposure were excluded. Median hospice duration was 11 days. Nonhospice beneficiaries had significantly greater health care utilization, largely for acute conditions not directly related to cancer and higher overall costs. Nonhospice Group Hospice Group Risk Ratio (n = 18 165) (n = 18 165) (95% Cl) Hospitalizations, % (95% Cl) 65.1 (64.4-65.8) 42.3 (41.5-43.0) 1.5 (1.5-1.6) Intensive care unit admission, % 35.8 (35.1-36.5) 14.8 (14.3-15.3) 2.4 (2.3-2.5) (95% Cl) Invasive procedures, % (95% Cl) 51.0(50.3-51.7) 26.7 (26.1-27.4) 1.9 (1.9-2.0) Death in hospital or nursing facility 74.1 (73.5-74.8) 14(13.5-14.5) 5.3 (5.1-5.5) Costs in last year of life, $ (95% Cl) 71 517 62 819 Difference, 8697 (70 543-72 490) (62 082-63 557) (7560-9835) CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE In this sample of Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries with poor-prognosis cancer, those receiving hospice care vs not (control), had significantly lower rates of hospitalization, intensive care unit admission, and invasive procedures at the end of life, along with significantly lower total costs during the last year of life.
- Subjects
CANCER patients; HOSPICE care; MEDICAL care; CANCER prognosis; CAUSES of death; PALLIATIVE treatment
- Publication
JAMA: Journal of the American Medical Association, 2014, Vol 312, Issue 18, p1888
- ISSN
0098-7484
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1001/jama.2014.14950