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- Lee Ellington, Margaret F Clayton, Maija Reblin, Kristin Cloyes, Anna C Beck, Joan K Harrold, Pamela Harris, and David Casarett.
- 1 College of Nursing, University of Utah , Salt Lake City, Utah.
- J Palliat Med. 2016 May 1; 19 (5): 482-7.
BackgroundHospice provides intensive end-of-life care to patients and their families delivered by an interdisciplinary team of nurses, aides, chaplains, social workers, and physicians. Significant gaps remain about how team members respond to diverse needs of patients and families, especially in the last week of life.ObjectiveThe study objective was to describe the frequency of hospice team provider visits in the last week of life, to examine changes in frequency over time, and to identify patient characteristics that were associated with an increase in visit frequency.DesignThis was a retrospective cohort study using electronic medical record data.Setting/SubjectsFrom U.S. not-for-profit hospices, 92,250 records were used of patients who died at home or in a nursing home, with a length of stay of at least seven days.MeasurementsData included basic demographic variables, diagnoses, clinical markers of illness severity, patient functioning, and number of hospice team member visits in the last seven days of life.ResultsOn average the total number of hospice team member visits in the last week of life was 1.36 visits/day. Most were nurse visits, followed by aides, social workers, and chaplains. Visits increased over each day on average across the last week of life. Greater increase in visits was associated with patients who were younger, male, Caucasian, had a spouse caregiver, and shorter lengths of stay.ConclusionsThis study provides important information to help hospices align the interdisciplinary team configuration with the timing of team member visits, to better meet the needs of the patients and families they serve.
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