Specialty palliative care use among cancer patients: A population-based study
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Background
Rigorous population-based assessments of the use of specialty palliative care (SPC) in the US are rare.
Settings/subjects
This study examined SPC use among cancer patients in a mid-sized metropolitan area in Southeast US.
Measurements
In this cancer decedent cohort study, data were acquired and linked from the state-wide cancer registry; state-wide hospital discharge dataset; and local SPC providers.
Results
12,030 individuals with cancer were included in this study; only 2,958 (24.6%) used SPC. Of the 9,072 persons who did not use SPC, 3,877 (42.7%) went only to hospitals that did not offer SPC; and 3,517 (38.8%) went to hospitals that offered SPC but did not use it. About half of SPC recipients (1493; 50.5%) first received SPC in the final 30 days of life, including 768 (26.0%) in the final week of life. Characteristics associated with using SPC use included being in an socio-economic status quintile other than the lowest; being younger; being Black; having a solid (versus hematological) cancer; having a shorter survival with cancer; dying in the latter two years of the study; being from an area of low or complete rurality; having a hospital admission in the final 60 days prior to initiation of PC or death; having more days in hospital; and living within 15 miles of a hospital offering SPC.
Conclusions
In this population-based study, only one-quarter of cancer patients used SPC, and for half who did so, it came in the final 30 days of life.
Key Message
This novel population-based study found that about 25% of cancer patients who died 2012-2015 had used of specialty palliative care (SPC). Half of them first received SPC in the final month of life. Characteristics associated with SPC included being Black, younger, and residing within 15 miles of a hospital offering SPC.