End-of-life Health-Care Utilization Patterns Among Chronically Ill Older Adults

Author:

Greenle Meredith MacKenzie1ORCID,Hirschman Karen B.2,Coburn Ken3,Marcantonio Sherry3,Hanlon Alexandra L.2,Naylor Mary2,Mauer Elizabeth4,Ulrich Connie2

Affiliation:

1. Villanova University M. Louise Fitzpatrick College of Nursing, Villanova, PA, USA

2. University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, Philadelphia, PA, USA

3. Health Quality Partners, Doylestown, PA, USA

4. Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, USA

Abstract

Patients with chronic illness are associated with high health-care utilization and this is exacerbated in the end of life, when health-care utilization and costs are highest. Complex Care Management (CCM) is a model of care developed to reduce health-care utilization, while improving patient outcomes. We aimed to examine the relationship between health-care utilization patterns and patient characteristics over time in a sample of older adults enrolled in CCM over the last 2 years of life. Generalized estimating equation models were used. The sample (n = 126) was 52% female with an average age of 85 years. Health-care utilization rose sharply in the last 3 months of life with at least one hospitalization for 67% of participants and an emergency department visit for 23% of participants. In the last 6 months of life, there was an average of 2.17 care transitions per participant. The odds of hospitalization increased by 27% with each time interval ( P < .001). Participants demonstrated 11% greater odds of having a hospitalization for each additional comorbidity ( P = .05). A primary diagnosis of heart failure or coronary artery disease was associated with 21% greater odds of hospitalization over time compared to other primary diagnoses ( P = .017). Females had 70% greater odds of an emergency department visit compared to males ( P = .046). For each additional year of life, the odds of an emergency department visit increased by about 7% ( P < .001). Findings suggest the need for further interventions targeting chronically ill older adults nearing end of life within CCM models.

Funder

NewCourtland Center for Transitions in Care

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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