A Study Of How Americans Die May Improve Their End Of Life [View all]
January 24, 2024 Rutgers University
A Rutgers Health analysis of millions of Medicare records has laid the groundwork for improving end-of-life care by demonstrating that nearly all older Americans follow one of nine trajectories in their last three years of life.
Identifying which paths people actually take is a necessary precursor to identifying which factors send different people down different paths and designing interventions that send more people down whatever path is right for them, said Olga Jarrín, the Hunterdon Professor of Nursing Research at Rutgers and corresponding author of the study published in
BMC Geriatrics.
The team pulled the final three years of clinical records from a randomly selected 10 percent of all 2 million Medicare beneficiaries who died in 2018. Analysis of how much personal care each patient received and where they received care revealed three major care clusters home, skilled home care and institutional care. Each cluster contains three distinct trajectories.
Roughly 59 percent of patients fell into the home cluster, meaning they spent most of their last three years at home while friends and family helped them with any tasks they couldnt do for themselves. Such patients typically received little professional care, either in their own homes or in nursing homes, until the last year of life.
More:
https://scienceblog.com/541938/a-study-of-how-americans-die-may-improve-their-end-of-life/