• J Pain Symptom Manage · Nov 2015

    Determinants of Hospital Death for Taiwanese Pediatric Cancer Decedents, 2001-2010.

    • Yen-Ni Hung, Tsang-Wu Liu, and Siew Tzuh Tang.
    • School of Gerontology Health Management, College of Nursing, Taipei Medical University, Taipei, Taiwan, Republic of China.
    • J Pain Symptom Manage. 2015 Nov 1; 50 (5): 685-92.

    ContextFactors influencing pediatric cancer patients' place of death may have evolved with advances in medical and hospice care since earlier studies were done.ObjectivesTo comprehensively analyze factors associated with hospital death in an unbiased population of pediatric cancer patients in Taiwan.MethodsThis was a retrospective cohort study using administrative data for 1603 Taiwanese pediatric cancer patients who died in 2001-2010. Place of death was hypothesized to be associated with 1) patient sociodemographics and disease characteristics, 2) primary physician's specialty, 3) characteristics and health care resources at both the hospital and regional levels, and 4) historical trends.ResultsMost Taiwanese pediatric cancer patients (87.4%) died in an acute care hospital. The probability of dying in hospital increased slightly over time, reaching significance only in 2009 (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 95% CI: 2.84 [1.32-6.11]). Children were more likely to die in an acute care hospital if they resided in the most urbanized area, were diagnosed with leukemia or lymphoma (2.32 [1.39-3.87]), and received care from a pediatrician (1.58 [1.01-2.47]) in a nonprofit proprietary hospital (1.50 [1.01-2.24]) or large hospital, reaching significance for the third quartile (2.57 [1.28-5.18]) of acute care hospital beds.ConclusionTaiwanese pediatric cancer patients predominantly died in an acute care hospital with a slightly increasing trend of shifting place of death from home to hospital. Propensity for hospital death was determined by residential urbanization level, diagnosis, primary physician's specialty, and the primary hospital's characteristics and health care resources. Clinical interventions and health policies should ensure that resources are allocated to allow pediatric cancer patients to die in the place they and their parents prefer to achieve a good death and promote their parents' bereavement adjustment.Copyright © 2015 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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