| Literature DB >> 21629752 |
Denise N Guerriere1, Peter C Coyte.
Abstract
Provision of end-of-life care in North America takes place across a multitude of settings, including hospitals, ambulatory clinics and home settings. As a result, family caregiving is characteristically a major component of care within the home. Accordingly, economic evaluation of the end-of-life care environment must devote equal consideration to resources provided by the public health system as well as privately financed resources, such as time and money provided by family caregivers. This paper addresses the methods used to measure end-of-life care costs. The existing empirical literature will be reviewed in order to assess care costs with areas neglected in this body of literature to be identified. The Ambulatory and Home Care Record, a framework and tool for comprehensively measuring costs related to the provision and receipt of end-of-life care across all health care settings, will be described and proposed. Finally, areas for future work will be identified, along with their potential contribution to this body of knowledge.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21629752 PMCID: PMC3100578 DOI: 10.4061/2011/374237
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Aging Res ISSN: 2090-2204
Cost categories captured in the end-of-life empirical literature, by study.
| Public | Private | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study (Authors' Names) | Economic study objectives and design | In-patient | Home and ambulatory | Out-of-pocket | Time losses (labour market) | Time losses (Household work/leisure) | Third party insurance |
| Axelsson and Christensen [ | Hospitalization costs of patients enrolled in a home-based palliative care service were compared with a matched historical cohort receiving institutionally based care and a cohort of patients eligible for but not receiving the palliative service (Sweden). | × | |||||
| Bruera et al. [ | A retrospective study comparing acute-care costs in terminally ill patients during their last hospital admission prior to and after implementation of a regional palliative care program. | × | × | ||||
| Brumley et al. [ | A prospective study comparing service utilization of a palliative care program with regular home health care (California). | × | × | ||||
| Brumley et al. [ | A randomized controlled trial to evaluate the ability of an in-home palliative care program to reduce medical costs in comparison to standard care. | × | × | ||||
| Chan et al. [ | A prospective study to determine the societal cost a palliative care program from first admission until death (Hong Kong). | × | × | × | × | ||
| Cowan [ | Review of administrative data to evaluate costs of an in-patient palliative care consultation service compared with inpatients receiving usual care (USA). | × | |||||
| Dumont et al. [ | A prospective study of palliative care to compare resource utilization, service use, and associated costs in five regions across Canada. | × | × | × | × | ||
| Elsayem et al. [ | Retrospective review of in-patient costs associated with patients enrolled in a Palliative Care In-patient Service (USA). | × | |||||
| Fassbender et al. [ | Retrospective review (administrative databases) to evaluate health system costs of palliative care before and after implementation of a community-based palliative care service (Canada). | × | × | ||||
| Gόmez-Batiste et al. [ | Prospective multicentre study to compare in-patient costs and resource utilization of a palliative care service compared with historical data prior to implementation of the service (Spain). | × | × | ||||
| Hanson et al. [ | Prospective case-control study to determine the impact of palliative care consultations on hospital costs of terminally ill hospitalized patients (USA). | × | |||||
| Johnson et al. [ | Pilot study to evaluate service use and costs of a home-based palliative care program (Canada). | × | |||||
| Oliver et al. [ | A retrospect chart analysis to determine resource use and costs of patients diagnosed with small lung cell carcinoma from diagnosis until death (United Kingdom). | × | × | ||||
| Penrod et al. [ | Retrospective analysis of administrative data to examine hospital utilization and direct costs of a palliative care consultation program in comparison to usual care in two centers (USA). | × | |||||
| Shnoor et al. [ | Retrospective case-control cost analysis of patients receiving home hospice services in comparison to conventional health services in the two months prior to death (Israel). | × | × | × | × | ||
| Smith et al. [ | Case-control study to measure the cost of care in a dedicated in-patient palliative care unit. Daily costs of the palliative care unit were compared to in-patient costs prior to transfer to unit, as well as to patients who died using conventional medical services. | × | |||||
| Tamir et al. [ | Retrospective review of administrative databases to compare health service utilization during the last year of life in patients receiving home-specialized palliative care with nonspecialized care (Israel). | × | × | ||||
| White et al. [ | Longitudinal case study to measure costs of a hospital-based palliative care unit in the 20 days prior to death. Costs of care were compared between the palliative care unit, the ICU, and other units. | × | |||||
Framework for the assessment of end-of-life costs.
| Expenditure category | Resource |
|---|---|
| (i) Ambulatory | Health care professional appointments |
| (ii) In-patient | Hospitalizations |
| (iii) Home | Home Care: nursing, personal support/ |
| (i) 3rd Party insurance | Health care appointments |
| (ii) Out-Of-Pocket | Health care professional appointments |
| (iii) Caregiver Time Losses | Time devoted by family/friends to caregiving v(i) Time lost from paid market labour |
| (iv) Employer | Time missed by employees who are family caregivers |
| Type of health care professional (see list below) | Number of hours health care professional visited |
|---|---|
| Nurse | 2 hrs (6 visits) |
| Personal support worker | 22 hrs (12 visits) |
Examples of health care professional: nurse, palliative physician, personal support worker, occupational therapist, physiotherapist, physician.
| Type(s) of visit (see examples below) | Method of travel | If by car | Other travel costs, for example, taxi | Other costs, for example, food | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total distance (Km) | Parking costs | Type | Amount | Type | Amount | ||
| Oncologist | Car | 8 | $23 | — | $ | Food | $5 |
| Personal support worker— | — | — | $ | Taxi | $40 | — | $ |
| — | — | $ | — | — | — | $ | |
Examples of visits: medical oncologist, radiation oncologist, family doctor, nurse, emergency room, physiotherapist, medical/lab test (please specify)
Examples of tests: blood test, X-rays, ultrasound, CT, MRI
Examples of methods of travel: car, public transit, taxi.
| Type of care provider (see examples below) | Total paid to care provider | Will you be reimbursed for this money? (yes or no) If yes, indicate % or amount reimbursed |
|---|---|---|
| Physiotherapist | $75 | 80% |
| Personal support worker | $200/8 hrs | No |
Examples of Care provider: nurse, personal support worker, occupational therapist, physiotherapist.
| Name of medicine or description of equipment/supplies (e.g., syringes, thermometer) | Amount paid by you | Provided by home care agency. If equipment, borrowed or given to you to keep? | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total cost of medicine (including dispensing fee) or supplies/equipment (rented/purchased) | Will you be reimbursed for this money? (yes or no) | ||
| Acetaminophen | $10 | No | No |
| Nutritional Drinks | $13 | Yes (90%) | No |
| Care provider age/male (M) or female (F) | Total number of hours you/care provider spent providing care over the past 2 weeks | Number of hours you/care provider took away from employment over the past 2 weeks | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unpaid leave | Sick leave | Vacation time | ||
| Female/50 yrs old | 42 | — | — | 7.5 hrs |
| Male/70 yrs old | 70 | N/A | N/A | N/A |
*NA: Not applicable because care provider is not employed outside the home.
Examples of care: traveling to and attending health care appointments, suctioning, resting, changing a dressing, feeding.