Authors
Courtney L Olmsted, Amy M Johnson, Peter Kaboli, Joseph Cullen, Mary S Vaughan-Sarrazin
Publication date
2014/11/1
Journal
JAMA surgery
Volume
149
Issue
11
Pages
1169-1175
Publisher
American Medical Association
Description
Importance
Many hospitals have undertaken initiatives to improve care during the end of life, recognizing that some individuals have unique needs that are often not met in acute inpatient care settings. Studies of surgical patients have shown this population to receive palliative care at reduced rates in comparison with medical patients.
Objective
To determine differences in the use of palliative care and hospice between surgical and medical patients in an integrated health care system.
Design, Setting, and Participants
Veterans Health Administration (VHA) enrollment data and administrative data sets were used to identify 191 280 VHA patients who died between October 1, 2008, and September 30, 2012, and who had an acute inpatient episode in the VHA system in the last year of life. Patients were categorized as surgical if at any time during the year preceding death they underwent a surgical procedure (n = 42 …
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