The Association Between Race and Place of Death Among Persons With Dementia.

TitleThe Association Between Race and Place of Death Among Persons With Dementia.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2022
AuthorsMayan, I, Yaffe, K, James, J, Hunt, LJ
JournalJ Pain Symptom Manage
Volume64
Issue3
Paginatione109-e114
Date Published2022 Sep
ISSN1873-6513
KeywordsCaregivers, Death, Dementia, Ethnicity, Hispanic or Latino, Humans, United States
Abstract

CONTEXT: Little is known about racial differences in place of death for persons with dementia (PWD), who may be especially vulnerable to receiving care at end of life that is not concordant with their goals or that places higher burden on caregivers.

OBJECTIVES: To determine if there are racial and ethnic differences in place of death among PWD.

METHODS: We analyzed data from the nationally representative National Health and Aging Trends study. Participants were included if they had probable dementia as defined by a previously validated algorithm and died between 2012 and 2020. Race and ethnicity were self-reported. Place of death was obtained from post-mortem interviews with bereaved caregivers.

RESULTS: The sample included 993 decedents with dementia (81.4% white; 11.0% black, 7.6% hispanic). A higher percentage of black and hispanic decedents died in the hospital (30.3% and 32.8%, respectively) compared to white decedents (19.0%). A higher percentage of white decedents died in the nursing home (31.0%) than black (22.4%) or hispanic decedents (15.0%) In adjusted analyses, black decedents had a higher odds of hospital death (AOR 1.50; 95% CI 1.01, 2.24) compared to white decedents, with similar trends found for hispanic decedents.

CONCLUSION: We found racial and ethnic differences in location of death for PWD, with black and hispanic PWD more likely to die in the hospital compared to white PWD. More research is needed to determine if the differences found represent goal concordant care or rather lack of access to high quality of care at the end of life.

DOI10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2022.05.010
Alternate JournalJ Pain Symptom Manage
PubMed ID35618245
PubMed Central IDPMC10026613
Grant ListK76 AG074924 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States
KL2 TR001870 / TR / NCATS NIH HHS / United States
R35 AG071916 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States