Nursing-home hospice
care reduces end-of-life hospitalizations
By Katherine Kahn, Contributing Writer
Health Behvior News Service
Nursing-home residents in hospice care have about half the chance of
being admitted to a hospital in their last 30 days of life compared
to peers who don’t receive hospice care, a large new study confirms.
“Our study provides strong evidence that access to hospice
in nursing homes significantly reduces hospitalization,”
said study author Pedro Gozalo, Ph.D.
Gozalo and co-investigator Susan Miller, Ph.D., of Brown
Medical School, examined data from 183,742 nursing home
residents in five states. The retrospective study is
published online in Health Services Research.
People who choose hospice, which focuses on comfort instead
of cure, tend to refuse aggressive end-of-life treatment
anyway, Gozalo said. But even taking this into
consideration, hospice still makes a significant difference
in keeping people out of the hospital in their last days,
the study shows.
The study also looked at characteristics of nursing home
residents who receive hospice care. They are more likely to
have a cancer diagnosis, although “two-thirds of nursing-
home residents in hospice have a noncancer diagnosis,”
Gozalo said. Hospice patients are also more likely to be
female, white and married compared to residents not
receiving hospice care.
Other factors, such as nursing-home location, also influence
enrollment in hospice. For example, nursing homes with
hospice providers farther than 15 miles away had fewer
residents using these services. In addition, enrollment in
hospice varies widely from state to state.
Hospitalizing a terminally ill patient may negatively affect
that person’s remaining quality of life. From an economic
standpoint, such hospitalizations can result in large and
unwarranted expenditures.
“About 80 percent of nursing homes now have arrangements to
provide hospice care,” Gozalo said, but that doesn’t mean
access is a given. Failing to identify residents who need
hospice, financial incentives for nursing homes to keep
providing skilled care and local health system policy may
affect access to hospice services, Miller said.
Susan Mitchell, M.D., an associate professor at Harvard
Medical School, said, “Families of nursing home residents
need to know hospice is an option and that their loved one
is entitled to the Medicare hospice benefit. They can
request hospice from the doctor or social worker. They can
also contact a hospice provider themselves,” if the nursing
home does not offer hospice care, Mitchell said.
The study was funded by a grant from the Agency of
Healthcare Research and Quality, U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services.