The Effect of Hospice on Hospitalizations of Nursing Home Residents
Abstract
Objectives
Hospice
enrollment is known to reduce risk of hospitalizations for nursing home
residents who use it. We examined whether residing in facilities with a
higher hospice penetration: (1) reduces hospitalization risk for
nonhospice residents; and (2) decreases hospice-enrolled residents'
hospitalization risk relative to hospice-enrolled residents in
facilities with a lower hospice penetration.
Methods
Medicare
Beneficiary File, Inpatient and Hospice Claims, Minimum Data Set
Version 2.0, Provider of Services File, and Area Resource File.
Retrospective analysis of long-stay nursing home residents who died
during 2005–2007. Overall, 505,851 nonhospice (67.66%) and 241,790
hospice-enrolled (32.34%) residents in 14,030 facilities nationwide were
included. We fit models predicting the probability of hospitalization
conditional on hospice penetration and resident and facility
characteristics. We used instrumental variable method to address the
potential endogeneity between hospice penetration and hospitalization.
Distance between each nursing home and the closest hospice was the
instrumental variable.
Results
In the
last 30 days of life, 37.63% of nonhospice and 23.18% of hospice
residents were hospitalized. Every 10% increase in hospice penetration
leads to a reduction in hospitalization risk of 5.1% for nonhospice
residents and 4.8% for hospice-enrolled residents.
Conclusions
Higher
facility-level hospice penetration reduces hospitalization risk for
both nonhospice and hospice-enrolled residents. The findings shed light
on nursing home end-of-life care delivery, collaboration among
providers, and cost benefit analysis of hospice care.
No comments:
Post a Comment