American journal of public health
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This paper presents the preliminary results of the economic analyses of the National Hospice Study (NHS), mandated by the United States Congress to investigate the implications of including hospice services in Medicare. Data were collected over an 18-month period from approximately 4,000 patients receiving hospice and conventional terminal care in 25 hospices and 12 conventional care sites. Subsequent analysis may lead to changes in the specific results, and some of the differences may be due to confounding variables that cannot be adjusted for. ⋯ However, HB costs seem lower than conventional care costs only for patients with lengths of stay less than two months. Hospice and conventional care patients appear to differ with respect to predisposition toward intensive health care utilization. When this difference is explored more thoroughly in subsequent analyses, the estimated cost differential between hospice and conventional care may change.