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328513
Patient mix and pattern of care in hospices: Results from the National Home and Hospice Care Survey (NHHCS)


Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Mengying He, Health Services Administration, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL
Haiyan Qu, PhD, Department of Health Services Administration, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL
Richard Shewchuk, PhD, Department of Health Services Administration, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL
Background: Hospice care is to reduce pain and emotional hurt of patients and to improve their quality by offering a broad range of services which address patients’ needs from the following four perspectives: physical care, emotional care, social care, and spiritual care. Medicare reimburses hospices based on a fixed per diem rate, regardless of patients’ diagnosis and how much resources they will use.  Thus hospices may be less likely to admit patients who are heavy users of services. The purpose of this study is to determine the degree of hospice services provision to patients and to see if patient utilization of hospice services differed among different diagnoses.

Method: The 2007 National Home and Hospice Care Survey (NHHCS) was a cross-sectional study with the sample size of 4733 hospice discharged patients. The primary outcome variable is the number of services used by patient including core and noncore services. The key independent variable is patient disease types.

Results: In 2007, the most utilized core services was skilled nursing services (99.1%) and the most used noncore services was personal care and therapy services (80.1%). Patients who have mental disorders (e.g., dementia) utilized less number of core services when comparing to cancer patients (b=-.38).

Conclusions: Patient utilization of hospice services is different based on their disease types with cancer patient used more number of core services. Policy makers may need to consider changing the fixed per diem reimbursement method of hospice care to a more process and outcome based reimbursement rate.

Learning Areas:

Provision of health care to the public

Learning Objectives:
Describe hospice patient disease types List the most used core and non-core hospice services by patients Compare the hospice service utilization by patient diagnosis

Keyword(s): End-of-Life Care, Treatment Patterns

Presenting author's disclosure statement:

Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I am a PhD candidate with a research interest in hospice and palliative care, specifically about how do measure hospice quality, what factors may contribute to the quality variance among hospice agencies.
Any relevant financial relationships? No

I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.

Back to: 4097.0: Palliative Care Roundtable