• Medical care · Oct 2007

    Patient characteristics and end-of-life health care utilization among Medicare beneficiaries in 1989 and 1999.

    • Sydney M Dy, Jennifer L Wolff, and Kevin D Frick.
    • Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. sdy@jhsph.edu
    • Med Care. 2007 Oct 1; 45 (10): 926-30.

    ObjectiveTo evaluate the association of institutional residence and chronic disability with end-of-life Medicare utilization in 1989 and 1999.Research DesignRetrospective study of nationally representative survey data linked to Medicare claims.SubjectsMedicare beneficiaries who completed the National Long-Term Care Survey in 1989 or 1999 and died within 1 year.MeasuresMedicare utilization [hospital, hospice, and skilled nursing facility (SNF)] in the last year of life and at death among the nondisabled, chronically disabled, and institutionalized.ResultsMedicare utilization over the last year of life was similar in 1989 and 1999 for the proportion hospitalized in all groups (eg, 76% vs. 73% among the nondisabled); there were significant increases in SNF use (eg, 9% vs. 20% among the nondisabled). Comparisons at the time of death were somewhat different, with significant increases in hospice use in all groups (eg, 4% vs. 22% in the nondisabled); there was a significant decrease in the proportion dying in the hospital only for the nondisabled group (53% vs. 40%). Utilization was similar for the nondisabled and chronically disabled, but was lower in the institutionalized (eg, proportion hospitalized in the last year of life was 51% in the institutionalized, 73% in the nondisabled, and 77% in the disabled group in 1999).ConclusionsDespite dramatic growth in hospice use, hospital and SNF utilization generally did not decline. Institutional residence, which is not usually included in analyses of Medicare claims, was strongly associated with utilization. This may affect the usefulness of claims-based efficiency indicators.

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