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Home Health Care and Place of Death in Medicare Beneficiaries With and Without Dementia

Abstract
Background and Objectives

Home health care supports patient goals for aging in place. Our objective was to determine if home health care use in the last 3 years of life reduces the risk of inpatient death without hospice.

Research Design and Methods

We analyzed the characteristics of 2,065,300 Medicare beneficiaries who died in 2019 and conducted multinomial logistic regression analyses to evaluate the association between the use and timing of home health care, dementia diagnosis, and place of death.

Results

Receiving any home health care in the last 3 years of life was associated with a lower probability of inpatient death without hospice (Pr 23.3% vs 31.5%, p < .001), and this effect was stronger when home health care began prior to versus during the last year of life (Pr 22.5% vs 24.3%, p < .001). Among all decedents, the probability of death at home with hospice compared to inpatient death with hospice was greater when any home health care was used (Pr 46.0% vs 36.5%, p < .001), and this association was strongest among beneficiaries with dementia who started home health care at least 1 year prior to death (Pr 55.6%, p < .001).

Discussion and Implications

Use of home health care during the last 3 years of life was associated with reduced rates of inpatient death without hospice, and increased rates of home death with hospice. Increasing affordable access to home health care can positively affect end-of-life care outcomes for older Americans and their family caregivers, especially those with dementia.

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Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 10/23/2024 | Link to this post on IFP |
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