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What’s Race got to do With it? How Palliative Care Consultation may Mitigate Racial Disparities in Future Care

It is unknown if care and cost outcomes differ by race and ethnicity following discharge from a hospitalization involving palliative care consultation to discuss goals-of-care (PCC). In this secondary analysis of 1,390 seriously-ill patients age 18+ alive at discharge who self-identified as Black, H...

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Autores principales: Starr, Lauren, Ulrich, Connie, Perez, G Adriana, Aryal, Subhash, Junker, Paul, O'Connor, Nina, Meghani, Salimah
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8682740/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igab046.3174
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author Starr, Lauren
Ulrich, Connie
Perez, G Adriana
Aryal, Subhash
Junker, Paul
O'Connor, Nina
Meghani, Salimah
author_facet Starr, Lauren
Ulrich, Connie
Perez, G Adriana
Aryal, Subhash
Junker, Paul
O'Connor, Nina
Meghani, Salimah
author_sort Starr, Lauren
collection PubMed
description It is unknown if care and cost outcomes differ by race and ethnicity following discharge from a hospitalization involving palliative care consultation to discuss goals-of-care (PCC). In this secondary analysis of 1,390 seriously-ill patients age 18+ alive at discharge who self-identified as Black, Hispanic, Asian, white, or other race and received PCC at an urban, academic medical center, we used binomial logistic regression and multiple linear regression controlling for demographic and clinical variables to identify factors associated with care experiences and costs following discharge from a hospitalization with PCC. In adjusted analyses, discharge to hospice was associated with Medicaid (p=0.016). Thirty-day readmission was associated with age 75+ (P=0.015), Medicaid (P=0.004), admission 30 days prior (P<0.0001), and Black race compared to white (P=0.016). Number of future days hospitalized was associated with Medicaid (P=0.001), admission 30 days prior (P=0.017), and Black race compared to white (P=0.012). Having any future hospitalization cost was associated with patient ages 65-74 (P=0.022) and 75+ (P=0.023), Medicaid (P=0.014), admission 30-days prior (P<0.0001), and Black race compared to white (P=0.021). Total future hospitalization costs were associated with female gender (P=0.025), Medicaid (P=0.009), admission 30 days prior (P=0.040), and Black race compared to white (P=0.037). Race or ethnicity was not a predictor of hospice enrollment. Randomized controlled trials are needed to understand if PCC is an intervention that reduces racial disparities in end-of-life care. Qualitative insights are needed to explain how PCC and socioeconomic factors such as Medicaid may mitigate future acute care use among racial and ethnic groups.
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spelling pubmed-86827402021-12-20 What’s Race got to do With it? How Palliative Care Consultation may Mitigate Racial Disparities in Future Care Starr, Lauren Ulrich, Connie Perez, G Adriana Aryal, Subhash Junker, Paul O'Connor, Nina Meghani, Salimah Innov Aging Abstracts It is unknown if care and cost outcomes differ by race and ethnicity following discharge from a hospitalization involving palliative care consultation to discuss goals-of-care (PCC). In this secondary analysis of 1,390 seriously-ill patients age 18+ alive at discharge who self-identified as Black, Hispanic, Asian, white, or other race and received PCC at an urban, academic medical center, we used binomial logistic regression and multiple linear regression controlling for demographic and clinical variables to identify factors associated with care experiences and costs following discharge from a hospitalization with PCC. In adjusted analyses, discharge to hospice was associated with Medicaid (p=0.016). Thirty-day readmission was associated with age 75+ (P=0.015), Medicaid (P=0.004), admission 30 days prior (P<0.0001), and Black race compared to white (P=0.016). Number of future days hospitalized was associated with Medicaid (P=0.001), admission 30 days prior (P=0.017), and Black race compared to white (P=0.012). Having any future hospitalization cost was associated with patient ages 65-74 (P=0.022) and 75+ (P=0.023), Medicaid (P=0.014), admission 30-days prior (P<0.0001), and Black race compared to white (P=0.021). Total future hospitalization costs were associated with female gender (P=0.025), Medicaid (P=0.009), admission 30 days prior (P=0.040), and Black race compared to white (P=0.037). Race or ethnicity was not a predictor of hospice enrollment. Randomized controlled trials are needed to understand if PCC is an intervention that reduces racial disparities in end-of-life care. Qualitative insights are needed to explain how PCC and socioeconomic factors such as Medicaid may mitigate future acute care use among racial and ethnic groups. Oxford University Press 2021-12-17 /pmc/articles/PMC8682740/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igab046.3174 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Starr, Lauren
Ulrich, Connie
Perez, G Adriana
Aryal, Subhash
Junker, Paul
O'Connor, Nina
Meghani, Salimah
What’s Race got to do With it? How Palliative Care Consultation may Mitigate Racial Disparities in Future Care
title What’s Race got to do With it? How Palliative Care Consultation may Mitigate Racial Disparities in Future Care
title_full What’s Race got to do With it? How Palliative Care Consultation may Mitigate Racial Disparities in Future Care
title_fullStr What’s Race got to do With it? How Palliative Care Consultation may Mitigate Racial Disparities in Future Care
title_full_unstemmed What’s Race got to do With it? How Palliative Care Consultation may Mitigate Racial Disparities in Future Care
title_short What’s Race got to do With it? How Palliative Care Consultation may Mitigate Racial Disparities in Future Care
title_sort what’s race got to do with it? how palliative care consultation may mitigate racial disparities in future care
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8682740/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igab046.3174
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