BMC Palliative Care (Dec 2024)
Specialized palliative outpatient clinic care involvement associated with decreased end-of-life hospital costs in cancer patients, a single center study
Abstract
Abstract Background Studies show that hospital deaths bring significant health care costs, and the involvement of specialized palliative care can help to reduce these costs. The aim of this retrospective registry-based study was to evaluate end-of-life hospital costs in patients dying in a university hospital oncology ward, with or without specialized palliative outpatient clinic contact at any timepoint. Methods The study population consists of all patients who died in the Kuopio University Hospital oncology ward in the years 2012–2018 (n = 457). Hospital costs in the last 30 days of life and data on treatment decisions and background factors were gathered. Costs for patients with and without palliative care contact were compared. Effects of various variables on the costs were analyzed using gamma regression model. Results Both the last 14 days’ and 30 days’ hospital costs before death were significantly lower among those 65 patients [14.2%] who had had a specialist palliative care contact. This was seen in inpatient day costs, microbiology, radiation therapy, laboratory, drug, radiology, and total costs. In a multivariate analysis including age, gender, year of death, time from diagnosis to death, and cancer type, the costs for 30 days prior to death were 33% lower in those patients who had had palliative care contact. Conclusions Our results provide first indications that a contact to specialist palliative care in an outpatient clinic may reduce end-of-life hospital care costs in hospital-deceased cancer patients.
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