| Literature DB >> 24714736 |
Maaike L De Roo1, Guido Miccinesi2, Bregje D Onwuteaka-Philipsen1, Nele Van Den Noortgate3, Lieve Van den Block4, Andrea Bonacchi2, Gé A Donker5, Jose E Lozano Alonso6, Sarah Moreels7, Luc Deliens8, Anneke L Francke9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dying at home and dying at the preferred place of death are advocated to be desirable outcomes of palliative care. More insight is needed in their usefulness as quality indicators. Our objective is to describe whether "the percentage of patients dying at home" and "the percentage of patients who died in their place of preference" are feasible and informative quality indicators. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24714736 PMCID: PMC3979710 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0093762
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Flowchart of the sample selection.
*We excluded patients if place of residence was known for ≤15 days in the last month of life OR if place of residence was known for <30 days and a transition took place during this period.
Characteristics of the patients and of the care provided per country.
| BELGIUM (N = 1036) | THE NETHERLANDS (N = 512) | ITALY (N = 1639) | SPAIN (N = 565) | ||
| N (%) | N (%) | N (%) | N (%) | ||
| PATIENT CHARACTERISTICS | |||||
|
| Female | 471 (45.6) | 235 (46.4) | 857 (52.3) | 249 (44.6) |
| Male | 563 (54.4) | 271 (53.6) | 782 (47.7) | 309 (55.4) | |
|
| 18–64 | 199 (19.4) | 113 (22.1) | 217 (13.2) | 64 (11.3) |
| 65–84 | 559 (54.4) | 280 (54.7) | 779 (47.5) | 268 (47.4) | |
| 85 and older | 269 (26.2) | 119 (23.2) | 643 (39.2) | 233 (41.2) | |
|
| Cancer | 501 (48.4) | 310 (60.8) | 767 (47.9) | 226 (40.8) |
| Cardiovascular diseases (except stroke) | 135 (13.0) | 62 (12.2) | 327 (20.4) | 105 (19.0) | |
| Respiratory diseases | 95 (9.2) | 42 (8.2) | 117 (7.3) | 59 (10.6) | |
| Neurologic diseases | 47 (4.5) | 14 (2.7) | 89 (5.6) | 29 (5.2) | |
| CVA - stroke | 57 (5.5) | 18 (3.5) | 149 (9.3) | 47 (8.5) | |
| Other | 200 (19.3) | 64 (12.5) | 151 (9.4) | 88 (15.9) | |
|
| No | 844 (82.6) | 458 (92.7) | 1183 (73.1) | 401 (72.4) |
| Yes, mild dementia | 102 (10.0) | 22 (4.5) | 228 (14.1) | 79 (14.3) | |
| Yes, severe dementia | 76 (7.4) | 14 (2.8) | 207 (12.8) | 74 (13.4) | |
|
| |||||
|
| No | 573 (55.4) | 264 (39.7) | 725 (44.3) | 207 (38.8) |
| Yes | 462 (44.6) | 299 (60.3) | 910 (55.7) | 326 (61.2) | |
|
| 227 (24.0) | 60 (14.2) | 230 (16.5) | 85 (19.5) | |
|
| 304 (31.9) | 90 (21.5) | 558 (39.3) | 112 (26.7) | |
|
| 647 (68.5) | 374 (87.8) | 781 (60.2) | 304 (67.1) | |
*Missing values: Belgium N = 2, the Netherlands N = 6, Italy no missing values, Spain N = 7.
Missing values: Belgium N = 9, the Netherlands, Italy and Spain no missing values.
Missing values: Belgium N = 1, the Netherlands N = 2, Italy N = 39, Spain N = 11.
Missing values: Belgium N = 14, the Netherlands N = 18, Italy N = 21, Spain N = 11.
Missing values: Belgium N = 1, the Netherlands N = 16, Italy N = 4, Spain N = 32.
Missing values: Belgium N = 90, the Netherlands N = 88, Italy N = 244, Spain N = 132.
**Missing values: Belgium N = 84, the Netherlands N = 94, Italy N = 219, Spain N = 146.
Missing values: Belgium N = 91, the Netherlands N = 86, Italy N = 342, Spain N = 112.
Observed and standardised quality indicator (QI) scores per country.
| BELGIUM (N = 1036) | THE NETHERLANDS (N = 512) | ITALY (N = 1639) | SPAIN (N = 565) | |
|
| 34.7% | 52.5% | 50.9% | 51.3% |
|
| 35.3% | 50.6% | 49.1% | 50.5% |
| N unanswered questions | 7 | 1 | 3 | 11 |
|
| 72.3% | 83.2% | 69.7% | 87.9% |
|
| 72.6% | 75.4% | 67.8% | 86.0% |
| N unanswered or inconsistently answered questions | 7 | 10 | 7 | 66 |
| N (%) preference unknown by GP | 592 (57.5%) | 199 (39.6%) | 1147 (70.3%) | 334 (66.9%) |
*These percentages have been standardised for gender, age, cause of death and diagnosis of dementia.
These patients were excluded from our study (see Figure 1).
This quality indicator was only calculated when preference was known: Belgium (n = 437), the Netherlands (n = 303), Italy (n = 485) and Spain (n = 165).
Comparison of the two quality indicators per country.
| BELGIUM (N = 1036) | THE NETHERLANDS (N = 512) | ITALY (N = 1639) | SPAIN (N = 565) | |||||
| At home | Not at home | At home | Not at home | At home | Not at home | At home | Not at home | |
| N (%) | N (%) | N (%) | N (%) | N (%) | N (%) | N (%) | N (%) | |
|
| 254 (70.6) | 62 (9.2) | 215 (79.9) | 37 (15.2) | 318 (38.1) | 20 (2.5) | 136 (46.9) | 9 (3.3) |
|
| 5 (1.4) | 116 (17.2) | 7 (2.6) | 44 (18.1) | 2 (0.2) | 145 (18.0) | 1 (0.3) | 19 (6.9) |
|
| 101 (28.1) | 498 (73.7) | 47 (17.5) | 162 (66.7) | 515 (61.7) | 639 (79.5) | 153 (52.8) | 247 (89.8) |
*Percentages are the percentage of deaths at home.
Percentages are the percentage of deaths not at home.
Including unanswered and inconsistently answered questions.
Associations of care characteristics with the two quality indicators per country.
| BELGIUM | THE NETHERLANDS | ITALY | SPAIN | |||||
| Home death | Preference met | Home death | Preference met | Home death | Preference met | Home death | Preference met | |
| (N = 1036) | (N = 437) | (N = 512) | (N = 303) | (N = 1639) | (N = 485) | (N = 565) | (N = 165) | |
| OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 3.87 (0.9–16.8) |
|
|
| 0.80 (0.4–1.8) | 0.43 (0.2–1.2) | 1.42 (0.2–8.1) | 0.81 (0.6–1.2) | 0.88 (0.4–1.8) |
| 0.39 (0.1–2.3) |
|
| 0.75 (0.5–1.1) | 0.78 (0.4–1.5) | 0.56 (0.3–1.1) | 0.52 (0.2–1.6) |
| 0.65 (0.4–1.8) |
| 0.58 (0.1–3.3) |
|
| 0.93 (0.6–1.4) | 0.94 (0.5–1.8) | 1.01 (0.4–2.4) | 0.89 (0.2–3.8) | 1.03 (0.8–1.3) | 1.25 (0.7–2.1) | 0.90 (0.5–1.5) | 0.32 (0.1–1.7) |
In this multivariable regression analyses, we corrected for gender, age at death, cause of death, diagnosis of dementia.
Odds ratios marked in bold are significant p<0.05.
Odds ratios marked in bold, with 1*are significant p<0.01.
Odds ratios marked in bold, with 2 **are significant p<0.001.
Reference category = no palliative care provided by the GP.
Reference category = care goal considered as not so important.