| Literature DB >> 23414145 |
Barbara Gomes1, Natalia Calanzani, Marjolein Gysels, Sue Hall, Irene J Higginson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Home-based models of hospice and palliative care are promoted with the argument that most people prefer to die at home. We examined the heterogeneity in preferences for home death and explored, for the first time, changes of preference with illness progression.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23414145 PMCID: PMC3623898 DOI: 10.1186/1472-684X-12-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Palliat Care ISSN: 1472-684X Impact factor: 3.234
Figure 1Flow of studies through review.
Figure 2Quality assessment for studies using quantitative and qualitative methods. Footnote: Quantitative criteria applied to 169 studies (153 purely quantitative, 16 using both quantitative and qualitative methods). Qualitative criteria applied to 57 studies (41 purely qualitative and 16 using both quantitative and qualitative methods). * Rating for study design (poor = retrospective, fair = cross-sectional, good = prospective). ** Rating for acceptable response rate (poor <60% or unknown, fair 60%-69%, good ≥70%).
Preferences for dying at home: quantity, quality, consistency and strength
| All people | 130 | 6463 | 64% (9/14) | >50% | no | >50% | yes |
| Patients | 92 | 1400 | 60% (6/10) | >50% | no | >50% | yes |
| Caregivers | 36 | 836 | 60% (3/5) | >50% | no | >50% | yes |
| General public | 26 | 4227 | 75% (3/4) | >50% | yes | n/a | n/a |
| Health professionals and students | 7 | 0 | 0% (0/0) | >50% | no | >50% | yes |
| Older people | 9 | 0 | 0% (0/0) | >50% | no | >50% | no |
| All people | 130 | 6463 | 29% (4/14) | >70% | no | <70% | no |
| Patients | 92 | 1400 | 50% (5/10) | >70% | no | <70% | no |
| Caregivers | 36 | 836 | 80% (4/5) | <70% | yes | n/a | n/a |
| General public | 26 | 4227 | 75% (3/4) | <70% | yes | n/a | n/a |
| Health professionals and students | 7 | 0 | 0% (0/0) | >70% | no | >70% | yes |
| Older people | 9 | 0 | 0% (0/0) | >70% | no | >70% | no |
Footnote: The table shows the total number of studies that reported a >50% and a >70% (or <70%) preference for dying at home amongst all types of participants and within each of five population groups. It then shows whether there is high strength evidence amongst all people and within each population group. High strength evidence was measured amongst only high quality studies and it was present, according to our grading system, if ≥70% of studies reported similar findings (e.g. there was no high strength evidence that >50% of all people preferred dying at home because the consistency was 64%, i.e. nine out of 14 studies showed estimates higher than 50% but five did not). The last two columns show whether there is moderate strength evidence; this was measured amongst medium and high quality studies and it was present, according to our grading system, if there was a minimum of three high quality studies in which <70% but >50% reported similar findings or if >50% of all studies reported similar findings with a minimum of three medium quality studies (e.g. there was moderate strength evidence that >50% of all people preferred dying at home because the consistency amongst high quality studies was 73%, i.e. more than half of the studies showed estimates higher than 50%).
aConsistency of findings across studies is shown as a percentage (number of high quality studies pointing in same direction / total number of high quality studies on topic).
Figure 3Preferences for dying at home: population group, study quality, year of publication. Footnote: The three plots show the percentage of participants expressing a preference for dying at home in each study by population group (general public, patients and caregivers). The number of dots indicates the number of studies included and the area of the dots indicates the number of participants in each study (largest sample size was 4,198 participants). Black and pink dots in studies conducted with patients distinguish between studies where >50% of patients had cancer (pink) and studies where ≥50% had non-malignant diseases (black); grey dots represent studies where the proportion of patients who had cancer was unknown.
Figure 4Preferences for dying at home amongst patients and their caregivers. Footnote: The plot shows in each study the percentage of patients and their caregivers expressing a preference for dying at home. The number of dots indicates the number of studies included (n = 34) and the area of the dots indicates the number of participants in the study (largest dot represents 4175 participants). Blue dots report to caregivers and pink dots to patients (dots are superimposed for one study as the percentages were 100% for both patients and caregivers). Country region was unknown in six studies.