Which Patients With Cancer Die at Home? A Study of Six European Countries Using Death Certificate Data

Author:

Cohen Joachim1,Houttekier Dirk1,Onwuteaka-Philipsen Bregje1,Miccinesi Guido1,Addington-Hall Julia1,Kaasa Stein1,Bilsen Johan1,Deliens Luc1

Affiliation:

1. From the End-of-Life Care Research Group, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium; Vrije Universiteit University Medical Center, Department of Public and Occupational Health, EMGO Institute for Health and Care Research, Amsterdam, the Netherlands; Centre for Study and Prevention of Cancer, Florence, Italy; School of Health Sciences, Southampton University, Southampton, United Kingdom; and Pain and Palliation Research Group, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, and St Olavs University...

Abstract

Purpose This study examines the proportion of cancer deaths occurring at home in six European countries in relation to illness and to demographic and health care factors. Methods Death certificate data of all cancer-related deaths in 2002 in Italy and 2003 in Belgium, the Netherlands, Norway, England, and Wales (N = 238,216) were linked with regional health care and area statistics. Multivariate binomial logistic regressions were performed to examine factors associated with dying at home. Results The percentage of all cancer deaths occurring at home was 12.8 in Norway, 22.1 in England, 22.7 in Wales, 27.9 in Belgium, 35.8 in Italy, and 45.4 in the Netherlands. Having solid cancers and being married increased the chances of dying at home in all countries. Being older and being a woman decreased the chances of dying at home, except in Italy where the opposite was the case. A higher educational attainment was associated with better chances of dying at home in Belgium, Italy, and Norway (countries where information on educational attainment was available). Better chances of dying at home were also associated with living in less urbanized areas in all countries but England. The number of hospital and care home beds seemed not to be universally strong predictors of dying at home. Conclusion There are large country differences in the proportion of patients with cancer dying at home, and these seem influenced by country-specific cultural, social, and health care factors. Alongside cross-national differences, country-specific aspects need to be considered in the development of policy strategies facilitating home death.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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