Place of Death for Adults Receiving Specialist Palliative Care in Their Last 3 Months of Life: Factors Associated With Preferred Place, Actual Place, and Place of Death Congruence

Author:

Smith Samantha1,Brick Aoife23,Johnston Bridget1,Ryan Karen45,McQuillan Regina56,O’Hara Sinead7,May Peter18,Droog Elsa9,Daveson Barbara10,Morrison R. Sean11,Higginson Irene J.8,Normand Charles18

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Health Policy and Management, School of Medicine, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland

2. Social Research Division, Economic and Social Research Institute, Dublin, Ireland

3. Department of Economics, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland

4. School of Medicine, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland

5. St Francis Hospice, Dublin, Ireland

6. Department of Palliative Care, Beaumont Hospital, Dublin, Ireland

7. Healthcare Pricing Office, Health Service Executive, Dublin, Ireland

8. Cicely Saunders Institute of Palliative Care, Policy & Rehabilitation, King's College London, London, UK

9. National Office of Quality & Patient Safety, Health Service Executive, Cork, Ireland

10. Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia

11. Department of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine, New York, USA and James J Peters VA Medical Center, Bronx, USA

Abstract

Objectives: Congruence between the preferred and actual place of death is recognised as an important quality indicator in end-of-life care. However, there may be complexities about preferences that are ignored in summary congruence measures. This article examined factors associated with preferred place of death, actual place of death, and congruence for a sample of patients who had received specialist palliative care in the last three months of life in Ireland. Methods: This article analysed merged data from two previously published mortality follow-back surveys: Economic Evaluation of Palliative Care in Ireland (EEPCI); Irish component of International Access, Rights and Empowerment (IARE I). Logistic regression models examined factors associated with (a) preferences for home death versus institutional setting, (b) home death versus hospital death, and (c) congruent versus non-congruent death. Setting: Four regions with differing levels of specialist palliative care development in Ireland. Participants: Mean age 77, 50% female/male, 19% living alone, 64% main diagnosis cancer. Data collected 2011-2015, regression model sample sizes: n = 342-351. Results: Congruence between preferred and actual place of death in the raw merged dataset was 51%. Patients living alone were significantly less likely to prefer home versus institution death (OR 0.389, 95%CI 0.157-0.961), less likely to die at home (OR 0.383, 95%CI 0.274-0.536), but had no significant association with congruence. Conclusions: The findings highlight the value in examining place of death preferences as well as congruence, because preferences may be influenced by what is feasible rather than what patients would like. The analyses also underline the importance of well-resourced community-based supports, including homecare, facilitating hospital discharge, and management of complex (eg, non-cancer) conditions, to facilitate patients to die in their preferred place.

Funder

Cicely Saunders International

Atlantic Philanthropies

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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