Hospice and palliative care utilization in 16 004 232 medicare claims: comparing trauma to surgical and medical inpatients

Author:

Fakhry Samir MORCID,Carrick Matthew M,Hoffman Melissa Red,Shen Yan,Garland Jeneva MORCID,Wyse Ransom J,Watts Dorraine D

Abstract

BackgroundHospice and palliative care (PC) utilization is increasing in geriatric inpatients, but limited research exists comparing rates among trauma, surgical and medical specialties. The goal of this study was to determine whether there are differences among these three groups in rates of hospice and PC utilization.MethodsPatients from Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Inpatient Standard Analytical Files for 2016–2020 aged ≥65 years were analyzed. Patients with a National Trauma Data Standard-qualifying ICD-10 injury code with abbreviated injury score ≥2 were classified as ‘trauma’; the rest as ‘surgical’ or ‘medical’ using CMS MS-DRG definitions. Patients were classified as having PC if they had an ICD-10 diagnosis code for PC (Z51.5) and as hospice discharge (HD) if their hospital disposition was ‘hospice’ (home or inpatient). Use proportions for specialties were compared by group and by subgroups with increasing risk of poor outcome.ResultsThere were 16M hospitalizations from 1024 hospitals (9.3% trauma, 26.3% surgical and 64.4% medical) with 53.7% women, 84.5% white and 38.7% >80 years. Overall, 6.2% received PC and 4.1% a HD. Both rates were higher in trauma patients (HD: 3.6%, PC: 6.3%) versus surgical patients (HD: 1.5%, PC: 3.0%), but lower than in medical patients (HD: 5.2%, PC: 7.5%). PC rates increased in higher risk patient subgroups and were highest for inpatient HD.ConclusionsIn this large study of Medicare patients, HD and PC rates varied significantly among specialties. Trauma patients had higher HD and PC utilization rates than surgical, but lower than medical. The presence of comorbidities, frailty and/or severe traumatic brain injury (in addition to advanced age) may be valuable criteria in selection of trauma patients for hospice and PC services. Further studies are needed to inform the most efficient use of hospice and PC resources, with particular focus on both timing and selection of subgroups most likely to benefit from these valuable yet limited resources.Level of evidenceLevel III, therapeutic/care management.

Publisher

BMJ

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1. Palliative care and trauma surgery: still too little, too late;Trauma Surgery & Acute Care Open;2024-08

2. What Does “Palliative Care” Represent in Research Using Secondary Data?;Journal of Pain and Symptom Management;2024-07

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