Jenny Bergqvist1,2, Gunnar Ljunggren3,4. 1. Department of Surgery, Capio St Görans Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden. 2. Department of Oncology and Pathology, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden. 3. Department of Healthcare, Stockholm County Council, Stockholm, Sweden. 4. Division of Family Medicine and Primary Care, Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society, Karolinska Institutet, Huddinge, Sweden.
Abstract
Background: Specialized home-based palliative care (HPC) services aim at reducing the number of visits to emergency departments (EDs) and hospitalizations at end of life. In addition, it offers patients the possibility to die at home. Objective: To investigate whether the last years' expansion of palliative care in Stockholm County, Sweden, reduced the health care resource use and/or increased the number of patients who died at home. Design: This is a population-based study of all registered 2780 patients referred to HPC in 2015 in the Stockholm region. The majority of the patients (2087) had cancer, but 693 patients had chronic medical illness, most often cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases. Results: HPC reduced visits to the ED and hospital admissions by 51% and 41%, respectively. The number of hospital admissions to the departments of oncology, medicine, and surgery was reduced, whereas admissions to palliative care units increased. For the 1773 patients alive after 90 days with HPC, the number of days spent in hospital reduced from 19,628 before HPC to 13,743 (30%) days with HPC. The most common place of death was at a specialized palliative care unit (48%), whereas 36% died at home. Conclusions: HPC reduced emergency health care resource use for the majority of patients, despite patients having progressing disease. To improve the quality of end-of-life care, we need to make early integration of palliative care available for a larger number of patients. In addition, we have to improve care pathways, especially for patients with gastrointestinal and lung cancer, who continued to be frequently admitted to hospital.
Background: Specialized home-based palliative care (HPC) services aim at reducing the number of visits to emergency departments (EDs) and hospitalizations at end of life. In addition, it offers patients the possibility to die at home. Objective: To investigate whether the last years' expansion of palliative care in Stockholm County, Sweden, reduced the health care resource use and/or increased the number of patients who died at home. Design: This is a population-based study of all registered 2780 patients referred to HPC in 2015 in the Stockholm region. The majority of the patients (2087) had cancer, but 693 patients had chronic medical illness, most often cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases. Results:HPC reduced visits to the ED and hospital admissions by 51% and 41%, respectively. The number of hospital admissions to the departments of oncology, medicine, and surgery was reduced, whereas admissions to palliative care units increased. For the 1773 patients alive after 90 days with HPC, the number of days spent in hospital reduced from 19,628 before HPC to 13,743 (30%) days with HPC. The most common place of death was at a specialized palliative care unit (48%), whereas 36% died at home. Conclusions: HPC reduced emergency health care resource use for the majority of patients, despite patients having progressing disease. To improve the quality of end-of-life care, we need to make early integration of palliative care available for a larger number of patients. In addition, we have to improve care pathways, especially for patients with gastrointestinal and lung cancer, who continued to be frequently admitted to hospital.
Entities:
Keywords:
home palliative care service; palliative care; palliative medicine; place of death; resource use
Authors: Katja Seitz; Luc Deliens; Joachim Cohen; Emanuel Adrian Cardozo; Vilma A Tripodoro; Fernando Cesar Iwamoto Marcucci; Luís Fernando Rodrigues; Lea Derio; Miguel Antonio Sánchez-Cárdenas; Valentina Salazar; Victor Rolando Samayoa; Ximena Pozo; Diane A Dykeman-Sabado; Celina Castañeda de la Lanza; Nineth Carolina Baltodano Algaba; Gabriela Píriz Alvarez; Leticia Viana; Tulio González; Tania Pastrana Journal: Rev Panam Salud Publica Date: 2021-12-16
Authors: Alberto Borraccino; Sara Campagna; Gianfranco Politano; Marco Dalmasso; Valerio Dimonte; Maria Michela Gianino Journal: BMC Palliat Care Date: 2020-08-16 Impact factor: 3.234