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- Kristen Westfall, Dominic Moore, Matthew Meeneghan, Sandra Jarr, John Valgus, and Stephen Bernard.
- 1 University of North Carolina School of Medicine , Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
- J Palliat Med. 2018 Feb 1; 21 (2): 216-219.
BackgroundCancer patients have a high rate of emergency department (ED) visits and inpatient hospitalizations (IHs) that may be reduced by use of outpatient palliative care services.ObjectiveTo determine whether the outpatient adult palliative care service at the University of North Carolina (UNC) Hospital, begun in 2008, reduced the frequency of ED visits and IH during a two-year period.DesignThe charts of patients with lung cancer or head and neck cancer seen by the supportive care service from 2010 to 2011, and of a contemporaneous set of potential consults that were not seen, were retrospectively reviewed to determine the impact of this care delivery model.Setting/SubjectsThe number of individuals with lung cancer and head cancer seen during this two-year period was 24 and 23, respectively, permitting a statistical analysis from which meaningful conclusions could be drawn.MeasurementsThe frequency of ED visits and IHs for each patient was reviewed. Descriptive statistics were used. Fisher's exact test was used for data categorized into two by two contingency tables. The nonparametric Jonckheere-Terpstra method was used to test for ordered differences across categories.ResultsConsultation with supportive care did not decrease overall use of ED visits. Patients with head and neck cancer showed an increase in ED visits (p = 0.08) but a reduction in inpatient admissions (p = 0.0004). In patients with lung cancer, the opposite effect was seen-an increase in inpatient visits (p = 0.02) but a decrease in ED visits. The frequency of ED visits was correlated with distance to the ED (p = 0.02), a finding that has not been noted before.ConclusionsFurther work is needed to define the best model for outpatient palliative care.
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