4.5 Article

Regional collaborative home-based palliative care and health care outcomes among adults with heart failure

Journal

CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION JOURNAL
Volume 194, Issue 37, Pages E1274-E1282

Publisher

CMA-CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1503/cmaj.220784

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Global Institute of Psychosocial, Palliative & End-of-Life Care (GIPPEC)
  2. University of Toronto Division of Palliative Medicine
  3. Dalla Lana School of Public Health
  4. Bruye`re Centre for Individualized Health
  5. Canadian Institutes for Health Research
  6. [PJT-153251]

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Regionally organized, collaborative, home-based palliative care is associated with a greater likelihood of patients with heart failure dying at home rather than in hospital. This approach also offers additional benefits such as higher rates of clinician home visits, longer time to first hospital admission, shorter hospital stays, and more time spent at home.
BackgroundInnovative models of collaborative palliative care are urgently needed to meet gaps in end-of-life care among people with heart failure. We sought to determine whether regionally organized, collaborative, home-based palliative care that involves cardiologists, primary care providers and palliative care specialists, and that uses shared decision-making to promote goal- and need-concordant care for patients with heart failure, was associated with a greater likelihood of patients dying at home than in hospital. MethodsWe conducted a population-based matched cohort study of adults who died with chronic heart failure across 2 large health regions in Ontario, Canada, between 2013 and 2019. The primary outcome was location of death. Secondary outcomes included rates of health care use, including unplanned visits to the emergency department, hospital admissions, hospital lengths of stay, admissions to the intensive care unit, number of visits with primary care physicians or cardiologists, number of home visits by palliative care physicians or nurse practitioners, and number of days spent at home. ResultsPatients who received regionally organized, collaborative, home-based palliative care (n = 245) had a 48% lower associated risk of dying in hospital (relative risk 52%, 95% confidence interval 44%-66%) compared with the matched cohort (n = 1172) who received usual care, with 101 (41.2%) and 917 (78.2%) patients, respectively, dying in hospital (number needed to treat = 3). Additional associated benefits of the collaborative approach included higher rates of clinician home visits, longer time to first hospital admission, shorter hospital stays and more days spent at home. InterpretationAdoption of a model of regionally organized, collaborative, home-based palliative care that uses shared decision-making may improve end-of-life outcomes for people with chronic heart failure.

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