Abstract
Background: Over half of the Japanese population hope to spend their last days at home; however, 73.0% die in hospitals. The proportion of deaths due to cancer in hospitals is even higher, at 82.4%, and is also high globally. Therefore, there is an urgent need to establish conditions that fulfill the hopes of patients, especially those with cancer, who hope to spend their last days at home. This study aimed to clarify medical resources and activities that are related to proportion of death at home among cancer patients.Methods: We used data from the Japanese National Database and public data. Japan's Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare provides national data on medical services to applicants for research purposes. Using the data, we calculated the proportion of deaths at home in each prefecture. We also collected information on medical resources and activities from public data and conducted multiple regression analyses to investigate factors associated with the proportion of death at home.Results: In total, 51,874 eligible patients were identified. The maximum and minimum proportions of death at home based on prefectures differed by approximately three-fold (14.8%–41.6%). We also identified scheduled home-visit medical care (coefficient=0.580) and acute and long-term care beds (coefficient=-0.317 and -0.245) as factors that increased and decreased the proportion of death at home, respectively.Conclusion: To fulfill the hopes of cancer patients to spend their last days at home, we recommend that the government develop policies to increase home visits by physicians and optimize hospital acute and long-term care beds.
Funder
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research
Publisher
The Korean Geriatrics Society
Subject
Geriatrics and Gerontology
Cited by
3 articles.
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