Abstract

ContextLarge-scale evaluations of the quality of end-of-life care in people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are lacking. ObjectivesBy means of a validated set of quality indicators (QIs), this study aimed to 1) assess appropriateness of end-of-life care in people dying from COPD; 2) examine variation between care regions; 3) establish performance standards. MethodsWe conducted a retrospective observational study of all deaths from COPD (ICD-10 codes J41-J44) in 2012 in Belgium, using data from administrative population-level databases. QI scores were risk-adjusted for comparison between care regions. ResultsA total of 4231 people died from COPD. During the last 30 days of life, 60% was admitted to hospital and 11.8% received specialized palliative care. Large regional variation was found in specialized palliative care use (4.0%–32.0%) and diagnostic testing in the last 30 days of life (44.0%–69.7%). Based on best performing quartile scores, relative standards were set (e.g., ≤54.9% for diagnostic testing). ConclusionOur study found indications of inappropriate end-of-life care in people with COPD, such as high percentages of diagnostic testing and hospital admissions and low proportions receiving specialized palliative care. Risk-adjusted variation between regions was high for several QIs, indicating the usefulness of relative performance standards to improve quality of end-of-life COPD care.

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