Abstract
Advanced care planning and location of death among older americans dying of cancer: A comparison with dying of cardiovascular diseases
APHA 2021 Annual Meeting and Expo
The Harmonized End of Life data sets, a linked collection of variables derived from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) Exit interviews between 1992 and 2014 were obtained. Cancer decedents (N=2,969) and decedents of cardiovascular diseases (N=4,558) were identified. Gender, age at death, marital status at death, race, level of education, and functional status before death were included to predict the likelihood of having a living will in place. Multinomial logistic regressions were used to evaluate factors associated with locations of death.
Decedents who died of cancer were more likely to have a living will in place, compared to those who died of cardiovascular diseases (OR = 1.5, p<.001) and cancer decedents were more likely to die at a hospice (versus died at hospitals, OR=3.4, p<.001).
Dying has become a prolonged process occurred, mostly, to older adults suffering from chronic diseases. The differences in advanced care planning and locations of death could reflect the different declining trajectories in health among patients dying of various terminal illnesses
Chronic disease management and prevention Public health or related public policy