• J Palliat Med · Dec 2020

    Observational Study

    Identifying Palliative Patients in General Practice: Focusing on the Place of Death and the Vital Role of Specialized Home Palliative Care: An Observational Study.

    • Peter Engeser, Rüdiger Leutgeb, Joshua Glassman, Joachim Szecseniy, and Gunter Laux.
    • Department of General Practice and Health Services Research, University Hospital Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.
    • J Palliat Med. 2020 Dec 1; 23 (12): 1626-1630.

    Abstract Objectives: Specialist palliative care was introduced into the German health care system for patients at the end of life. The primary objective of this study was to assess whether the provision of specialist home palliative care (SHPC) for outpatients increased the likelihood of patients dying at home. Methods: We studied data collected in 2015 from a German statutory health insurance company covering 3.872 million people. We evaluated how many patients were identified as needing palliative care and whether these patients were able to stay at home until death. The data were ascertained from general practices in Baden-Wuerttemberg, a part of Germany. Palliative care patients were identified using the International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-10 code Z51.5 or the assigned medical billing code of the German fee schedule. Patients receiving care from an SHPC team were identified using the billing codes 01425 or 01426. Adjusted odds ratios were calculated for the place of death with multivariable logistic regression. Results: We found 21,190 (0.55%) palliative patients in the whole population. Of these, 19,507 (92.05%) patients received general palliative care and 1683 (7.95%) patients received specialist palliative care. Mortality rate across all patients was 1.08% (41,800) and mortality rate of palliative patients was 44.08% (9494). In total, 19,833 (47.5%) of the general population died in hospitals, as opposed to only 2208 (23.2%) among palliative patients. Further analysis revealed that of those palliative patients receiving SHPC, 160 (13.3%) died in hospitals as opposed to 2048 (24.7%) of those receiving general care. The probability of dying at home increases already with the label "palliative patient" and gets stronger if care is provided by a specialist palliative care team. Conclusion: Most palliative patients are able to die at home. Palliative care teams are responsible for a small part of these patients. Despite the high symptom burden in this group, most are able to die at home.

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