Barriers of Acceptance to Hospice Care: a Randomized Vignette-Based Experiment.

TitleBarriers of Acceptance to Hospice Care: a Randomized Vignette-Based Experiment.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsTrandel, ET, Lowers, J, Bannon, ME, Moreines, LT, Dellon, EP, White, P, Cross, SH, Quest, TE, Lagnese, K, Krishnamurti, T, Arnold, RM, Harrison, KL, Patzer, RE, Wang, L, Zarrabi, AJohn, Kavalieratos, D
JournalJ Gen Intern Med
Volume38
Issue2
Pagination277-284
Date Published2023 Feb
ISSN1525-1497
KeywordsCystic Fibrosis, Female, Health Care Costs, Heart Failure, Hospice Care, Hospices, Humans, Male, Middle Aged
Abstract

BACKGROUND: The per diem financial structure of hospice care may lead agencies to consider patient-level factors when weighing admissions.

OBJECTIVE: To investigate if treatment cost, disease complexity, and diagnosis are associated with hospice willingness to accept patients.

DESIGN: In this 2019 online survey study, individuals involved in hospice admissions decisions were randomized to view one of six hypothetical patient vignettes: "high-cost, high-complexity," "low-cost, high-complexity," and "low-cost, low-complexity" within two diseases: heart failure and cystic fibrosis. Vignettes included demographics, prognoses, goals, and medications with costs. Respondents indicated their perceived likelihood of acceptance to their hospice; if likelihood was <100%, respondents were asked the barriers to acceptance. We used bivariate tests to examine associations between demographic, clinical, and organizational factors and likelihood of acceptance.

PARTICIPANTS: Individuals involved in hospice admissions decisions MAIN MEASURES: Likelihood of acceptance to hospice care KEY RESULTS: N=495 (76% female, 53% age 45-64). Likelihoods of acceptance in cystic fibrosis were 79.8% (high-cost, high-complexity), 92.4% (low-cost, high-complexity), and 91.5% (low-cost, low-complexity), and in heart failure were 65.9% (high-cost, high-complexity), 87.3% (low-cost, high-complexity), and 96.6% (low-cost, low-complexity). For both heart failure and cystic fibrosis, respondents were less likely to accept the high-cost, high-complexity patient than the low-cost, high-complexity patient (65.9% vs. 87.3%, 79.8% vs. 92.4%, both p<0.001). For heart failure, respondents were less likely to accept the low-cost, high-complexity patient than the low-cost, low-complexity patient (87.3% vs. 96.6%, p=0.004). Treatment cost was the most common barrier for 5 of 6 vignettes.

CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests that patients receiving expensive and/or complex treatments for palliation may have difficulty accessing hospice.

DOI10.1007/s11606-022-07468-7
Alternate JournalJ Gen Intern Med
PubMed ID35319086
PubMed Central IDPMC9905383
Grant ListK01HL133466 / HL / NHLBI NIH HHS / United States
UL1-TR-001857 / NH / NIH HHS / United States