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Journal article

Factors associated with home death for individuals who receive home support services: a retrospective cohort study

Abstract

ObjectivesTo determine the factors associated with a home death among older adults who received palliative care nursing home services in the home.MethodsThe participants in this retrospective cohort study were 151 family caregivers of patients who had died approximately 9 months prior to the study telephone interview. The interview focused on the last year of life and covered two main areas, patient characteristics and informal caregiver characteristics.ResultsOdds ratios [OR] and 95% confidence intervals [95% CI] were used to determine which of the 15 potential informal caregiver and seven patient predictor variables were associated with dying at home. Multivariate analysis revealed that the odds of dying at home were greater when the patient lived with a caregiver [OR = 7.85; 95% CI = (2.35, 26.27)], the patient stated a preference to die at home [OR= 6.51; 95% CI = (2.66,15.95)], and the family physician made home visits [OR = 4.79; 95% CI = (1.97,11.64)]. However the odds were lower for patients who had caregivers with fair to poor health status [OR = 0.22; 95% CI = (0.07, 0.65)] and for patients who used hospital palliative care beds [OR = 0.31; 95% CI = (0.12, 0.80)].DiscussionThe findings suggest that individuals who indicated a preference to die at home and resided with a healthy informal caregiver had better odds of dying at home. Home visits by a family physician were also associated with dying at home.

Authors

Brazil K; Bedard M; Willison K

Journal

BMC Palliative Care, Vol. 1, No. 1,

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

March 25, 2002

DOI

10.1186/1472-684x-1-2

ISSN

1472-684X

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