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Hospice utilization among Medicare beneficiaries dying from pancreatic cancer.

Anghela Z ParedesJ Madison HyerDiamantis I TsilimigrasRittal MehtaKota SaharaSusan WhiteMary E DillhoffAslam EjazJordan M CloydTimothy M Pawlik
Published in: Journal of surgical oncology (2019)
Among the 4369 deceased individuals, three-fourths of patients (n = 3252, 74.4%) used hospice at the time of death. Patients who did not use hospice were more likely to be male, have a complication on index admission and receive life sustaining treatments on subsequent admissions (P < .05). Only one-third (32.2%) of patients initiated hospice services early. Medicare expenditure during the last month of life was $10 000 lower among patients who initialized hospice services at least 1 month before death versus within 3 days of death (late: $10 581 [$5454-$17 200], early: $221 [$46-$733]; P < .001) CONCLUSION: While three-fourths of patients utilized hospice services after pancreatic resection, only one-third of patients initiated hospice services at least one-month before death. Late hospice use was associated with higher Medicare expenditures during the last month of life. Further research is needed to understand barriers to early hospice utilization.
Keyphrases
  • palliative care
  • end stage renal disease
  • ejection fraction
  • newly diagnosed
  • healthcare
  • chronic kidney disease
  • primary care
  • mental health
  • prognostic factors
  • patient reported outcomes
  • kidney transplantation