Site of Death, Place of Care, and Health Care Transitions Among US Medicare Beneficiaries, 2000-2015

Importance End-of-life care costs are high and decedents often experience poor quality of care. Numerous factors influence changes in site of death, health care transitions, and burdensome patterns of care. Objective To describe changes in site of death and patterns of care among Medicare decedents. Design, Setting, and Participants Retrospective cohort study among a 20% random sample of 1 361 870 decedents who had Medicare fee-for-service (2000, 2005, 2009, 2011, and 2015) and a 100% sample of 871 845 decedents who had Medicare Advantage (2011 and 2015) and received care at an acute care hospital, at home or in the community, at a hospice inpatient care unit, or at a nursing home. Exposures Secular changes between 2000 and 2015. Main Outcomes and Measures Medicare administrative data were used to determine site of death, place of care, health care transitions, which are changes in location of care, and burdensome patterns of care. Burdensome patterns of care were based on health care transitions during the last 3 days of life and multiple hospitalizations for infections or dehydration during the last 120 days of life. Results The site of death and patterns of care were studied among 1 361 870 decedents who had Medicare fee-for-service (mean [SD] age, 82.8 [8.4] years; 58.7% female) and 871 845 decedents who had Medicare Advantage (mean [SD] age, 82.1 [8.5] years; 54.0% female). Among Medicare fee-for-service decedents, the proportion of deaths that occurred in an acute care hospital decreased from 32.6% (95% CI, 32.4%-32.8%) in 2000 to 19.8% (95% CI, 19.6%-20.0%) in 2015, and deaths in a home or community setting that included assisted living facilities increased from 30.7% (95% CI, 30.6%-30.9%) in 2000 to 40.1% (95% CI, 39.9%-30.3% ) in 2015. Use of the intensive care unit during the last 30 days of life among Medicare fee-for-service decedents increased from 24.3% (95% CI, 24.1%-24.4%) in 2000 and then stabilized between 2009 and 2015 at 29.0% (95% CI, 28.8%-29.2%). Among Medicare fee-for-service decedents, health care transitions during the last 3 days of life increased from 10.3% (95% CI, 10.1%-10.4%) in 2000 to a high of 14.2% (95% CI, 14.0%-14.3%) in 2009 and then decreased to 10.8% (95% CI, 10.6%-10.9%) in 2015. The number of decedents enrolled in Medicare Advantage during the last 90 days of life increased from 358 600 in 2011 to 513 245 in 2015. Among decedents with Medicare Advantage, similar patterns in the rates for site of death, place of care, and health care transitions were observed. Conclusions and Relevance Among Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries who died in 2015 compared with 2000, there was a lower likelihood of dying in an acute care hospital, an increase and then stabilization of intensive care unit use during the last month of life, and an increase and then decline in health care transitions during the last 3 days of life.

[1]  Thomas D. Eliot,et al.  The Bereaved Family , 1932 .

[2]  B. Clarridge,et al.  Bereaved Family Member Perceptions of Quality of End‐of‐Life Care in U.S. Regions with High and Low Usage of Intensive Care Unit Care , 2005, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[3]  Juliana C. Cartwright Nursing Homes and Assisted Living Facilities As Places for Dying , 2002, Annual Review of Nursing Research.

[4]  A. Zaslavsky,et al.  Service Use at the End-of-Life in Medicare Advantage Versus Traditional Medicare , 2013, Medical care.

[5]  Pall Med,et al.  Dying in America: improving quality and honoring individual preferences near the end of life. , 2015, Military medicine.

[6]  J. Teno,et al.  Lessons from Oregon in Embracing Complexity in End-of-Life Care. , 2017, The New England journal of medicine.

[7]  Susan C. Miller,et al.  The residential history file: studying nursing home residents' long-term care histories(*). , 2011, Health services research.

[8]  A. Kelley,et al.  The Myth Regarding the High Cost of End-of-Life Care. , 2015, American journal of public health.

[9]  R. Mularski,et al.  Quality of dying in the ICU: ratings by family members. , 2005, Chest.

[10]  Vincent Mor,et al.  Change in end-of-life care for Medicare beneficiaries: site of death, place of care, and health care transitions in 2000, 2005, and 2009. , 2013, JAMA.

[11]  N. Sood,et al.  Less Intense Postacute Care, Better Outcomes For Enrollees In Medicare Advantage Than Those In Fee-For-Service. , 2017, Health affairs.

[12]  H. Prigerson,et al.  Prolonged grief disorder in the next of kin of adult patients who die during or after admission to intensive care. , 2012, Chest.

[13]  D. Grabowski,et al.  Nearly half of all Medicare hospice enrollees received care from agencies owned by regional or national chains. , 2015, Health affairs.

[14]  D. Blumenthal,et al.  Tailoring Complex Care Management for High-Need, High-Cost Patients. , 2016, JAMA.

[15]  N. Keating,et al.  Place of death: correlations with quality of life of patients with cancer and predictors of bereaved caregivers' mental health. , 2010, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[16]  K. Kahn,et al.  Family Perspectives on Aggressive Cancer Care Near the End of Life. , 2015, JAMA.

[17]  Vincent Mor,et al.  Family perspectives on end-of-life care at the last place of care. , 2004, JAMA.

[18]  V. Mor,et al.  End‐of‐Life Care in Black and White: Race Matters for Medical Care of Dying Patients and their Families , 2005, Journal of The American Geriatrics Society.

[19]  William A. Knaus,et al.  A controlled trial to improve care for seriously ill hospitalized patients. The study to understand prognoses and preferences for outcomes and risks of treatments (SUPPORT). The SUPPORT Principal Investigators. , 1995, JAMA.

[20]  Stefano Freguia Trichlorethylene Anaesthesia , 1953 .

[21]  D. Patrick,et al.  A measure of the quality of dying and death. Initial validation using after-death interviews with family members. , 2002, Journal of pain and symptom management.

[22]  R. Wachter,et al.  The hospitalist movement 5 years later. , 2002, JAMA.

[23]  V. Mor,et al.  Survival after multiple hospitalizations for infections and dehydration in nursing home residents with advanced cognitive impairment. , 2013, JAMA.

[24]  V. Freedman,et al.  Late Transitions and Bereaved Family Member Perceptions of Quality of End‐of‐Life Care , 2018, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[25]  Maggie M Rogers,et al.  The Growth of Palliative Care in U.S. Hospitals: A Status Report , 2016, Journal of palliative medicine.

[26]  D. Angus,et al.  Racial variation in the incidence, care, and outcomes of severe sepsis: analysis of population, patient, and hospital characteristics. , 2008, American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine.

[27]  V. Freedman,et al.  How Often Is End-of-Life Care in the United States Inconsistent with Patients' Goals of Care? , 2017, Journal of palliative medicine.

[28]  M. Schluchter,et al.  Social determinants, multimorbidity, and patterns of end-of-life care in older adults dying from cancer. , 2017, Journal of geriatric oncology.