• J Palliat Med · Oct 2020

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    Effect of the Serious Illness Care Program on Health Care Utilization at the End of Life for Patients with Cancer.

    • Joanna Paladino, Luca Koritsanszky, Brandon J Neal, Joshua R Lakin, Jane Kavanagh, Stu Lipsitz, Erik K Fromme, Justin Sanders, Evan Benjamin, Susan Block, and Rachelle Bernacki.
    • Ariadne Labs, Brigham and Women's Hospital & Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
    • J Palliat Med. 2020 Oct 1; 23 (10): 1365-1369.

    AbstractObjectives: To determine the effect of the Serious Illness Care Program on health care utilization at the end of life in oncology. Design: Analysis of the secondary outcome of health care utilization as part of a cluster-randomized clinical trial that ran from 2012 to 2016. Clinicians in the intervention group received training, coaching, and system supports to have discussions with patients using a Serious Illness Conversation Guide (SICG); clinicians in the control arm followed usual care. Setting/Subject: Patients with advanced cancer who died within two years of enrollment at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. Measurement: Health care utilization was abstracted from the electronic medical record using the National Quality Forum (NQF)-endorsed indicators of aggressive cancer care at the end of life and scored from 0 to 6 (one point for each aggressive indicator); t tests and chi-square tests were used to determine differences between intervention and control patients. Results: The charts of 159 patients who died were reviewed. Neither the main outcome of mean number of aggressive indicators (0.9 vs. 0.9, p = 0.84) nor the proportion of patients with any aggressive care (49% intervention [95% CI: 40-57] vs. 54% control [95% CI: 42-67]) differed between patients in the intervention and control groups. Conclusion: In this analysis of a secondary outcome from a randomized clinical trial of the Serious Illness Care Program, intervention and control patients had similar end-of-life health care utilization as measured by the mean number of NQF-endorsed indicators. Future research efforts should focus on studying the strategies by which communication about patients' prognosis, values, and goals leads to personalized care plans.

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