• J Pain Symptom Manage · Apr 2021

    Honoring Veterans' Preferences: The Association between Comfort Care Goals and Care Received at the End of Life.

    • Susan C Miller, Winifred J Scott, Mary Ersek, Cari Levy, Robert Hogikyan, Vyjeynathi S Periyakoil, Joan G Carpenter, Jennifer Cohen, and Mary Beth Foglia.
    • Department of Health Services, Policy & Practice, Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, Rhode Island, USA. Electronic address: Susan_Miller@brown.edu.
    • J Pain Symptom Manage. 2021 Apr 1; 61 (4): 743-754.e1.

    ContextAs part of its Life-Sustaining Treatment (LST) Decisions Initiative, the Veterans Health Administration (VA) in January 2017 began requiring electronic documentation of goals of care and preferences for Veterans with serious illness and at high risk for life-threatening events.ObjectivesTo evaluate whether goals of "to be comfortable" were associated with greater palliative care (PC) use and lesser acute care use.MethodsWe identified Veterans with VA inpatient or nursing home stays overlapping July 2018-January 2019, with LST templates documented by January 31, 2019, and who died by April 30, 2019 (N = 18,163). From template documentation, we identified a "to be comfortable" goal. Using VA and Medicare data, we determined PC use (consultations and hospice) and hospital, intensive care unit, and emergency department use 7 and 30 days before death. Multivariate logistic regression examined the associations of interest.ResultsSixty-four percent of the 18,163 Veterans had comfort-care goals; 80% with comfort care goals received hospice and 57% PC consultations (versus 57% and 46%, respectively, for decedents without comfort-care goals). In adjusted analyses, comfort care documented on the LST template prior to death was associated with significantly lower odds of hospital, intensive care unit, and emergency department use near the end of life. In the last 30 days of life, Veterans with a comfort care goal had 44% lower odds (adjusted odds ratio 0.57; 95% CI: 0.51, 0.63) of being hospitalized.ConclusionFindings support the VA's commitment to honoring of Veterans' preferences post introduction of its Life Sustaining Treatment Decisions Initiative.Published by Elsevier Inc.

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