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Societal costs of home and hospital end-of-life care for palliative care patients in Ontario, Canada
Author(s)Mo Yu, Denise Guerriere, Peter C Coyte
Journal titleHealth and Social Care in the Community, vol 23, no 6, November 2015
PublisherWiley Blackwell, November 2015
Pagespp 605-618
Sourcewileyonlinelibrary.com/journals/hsc
KeywordsTerminal care ; Palliative care ; Costs [care] ; Hospital services ; Therapeutic services [domiciliary] ; Comparison ; Canada.
AnnotationIn Canada, health system restructuring has led to a greater focus on home-based palliative care as an alternative to institutionalised palliative care. However, little is known about the effect of this change on end-of-life care costs and the extent to which the financial burden of care has shifted from the acute care public sector to families. This study assessed the societal costs of end-of-life care associated with two places of death (hospital and home), using a prospective cohort design in a home-based palliative care programme. Societal cost includes all costs incurred during the course of palliative care, irrespective of payer (e.g. health system, out-of-pocket, informal care-giving costs, etc.). Primary caregivers of terminal cancer patients were recruited from the Temmy Latner Centre for Palliative Care in Toronto, Canada. Demographic, service utilisation, care-giving time, health and functional status, and death data were collected by telephone interviews with primary caregivers over the course of patients' palliative trajectory. Logistic regression was conducted to model an individual's propensity for home death. Total societal costs of end-of-life care and component costs were compared between home and hospital death using propensity score stratification. Costs were presented in 2012 Canadian dollars ($1.00CDN = $1.00USD). The estimated total societal cost of end-of-life care was $34,197.73 per patient over the entire palliative trajectory (4 months on average). Results showed no significant difference (P > 0.05) in total societal costs between home and hospital death patients. Higher hospitalisation costs for hospital death patients were replaced by higher unpaid caregiver time and outpatient service costs for home death patients. Thus, from a societal cost perspective, alternative sites of death, while not associated with a significant change in total societal cost of end-of-life care, resulted in changes in the distribution of costs borne by different stakeholders. (RH).
Accession NumberCPA-151022213 A
ClassmarkLV: LVB: QDC: LD: N3: 48: 7S

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