4.6 Article

The burden of pre-admission pain, depression, and caregiving on palliative care needs for seriously ill trauma patients

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY
Volume 71, Issue 7, Pages 2229-2238

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jgs.18289

Keywords

palliative care; serious illness; symptom burden; trauma

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This study found that older adults with serious illness have a high prevalence of pain, depression, and unpaid caregiving hours before trauma admission, based on the analysis of Health and Retirement Study data. These findings may guide targeted palliative care interventions to reduce symptom burden and post-discharge healthcare utilization.
Introduction: Increasing numbers of individuals admitted to hospitals for trauma are older adults, many of whom also have underlying serious illnesses. Older adults with serious illness benefit from palliative care, but the palliative care needs of seriously ill older adults with trauma have not been elucidated. We hypothesize that older adults with serious illness have a high prevalence of pain, depression, and unpaid caregiving hours before trauma admission.Methods: Using Health and Retirement Study data (2008-2018) linked to Medicare claims, we identified patients 66 years or older who met an established definition of serious illness in surgery and were admitted with trauma. Descriptive analyses were performed for baseline patient characteristics, pre-admission pain (dichotomized as none/mild vs. moderate/severe), depression (dichotomized as no, Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression scale [CES-D] < 3 vs. yes, CES-D >= 3), and unpaid caregiving hours (dichotomized as low (< 30 h/month), high ( >= 30 h/month)).Results: We identified 1741 patients, 67.4% were female and 86.8% White. Mean age was 83 (SD 7.5), and 60.3% had >= 4 comorbidities. The majority (62.9%) were admitted due to falls, 33.5% had isolated hip fracture. The preva-lence of baseline moderate/severe pain and depression were 38.1% and 42.6%, respectively. Among the cohort, 42.2% had unpaid caregiving, of those 27.7% had >= 30 h/week of unpaid caregiving hours.Conclusions: Prior to trauma admission, older adults with serious illness have a high prevalence of pain, depression, and unpaid caregiving hours. These findings may inform targeted palliative care interventions to reduce symptom burden and post-discharge healthcare utilization.

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