Abstract

ObjectiveTo identify and explore differences in spending and utilization of key health services at the end of life among hip fracture patients across seven developed countries.Data SourcesIndividual‐level claims data from the inpatient and outpatient health care sectors compiled by the International Collaborative on Costs, Outcomes, and Needs in Care (ICCONIC).Study DesignWe retrospectively analyzed utilization and spending from acute hospital care, emergency department, outpatient primary care and specialty physician visits, and outpatient drugs. Patterns of spending and utilization were compared in the last 30, 90, and 180 days across Australia, Canada, England, Germany, New Zealand, Spain, and the United States. We employed linear regression models to measure age‐ and sex‐specific effects within and across countries. In addition, we analyzed hospital‐centricity, that is, the days spent in hospital and site of death.Data Collection/Extraction MethodsWe identified patients who sustained a hip fracture in 2016 and died within 12 months from date of admission.Principal FindingsResource use, costs, and the proportion of deaths in hospital showed large variability being high in England and Spain, while low in New Zealand. Days in hospital significantly decreased with increasing age in Canada, Germany, Spain, and the United States. Hospital spending near date of death was significantly lower for women in Canada, Germany, and the United States. The age gradient and the sex effect were less pronounced in utilization and spending of emergency care, outpatient care, and drugs.ConclusionsAcross seven countries, we find important variations in end‐of‐life care for patients who sustained a hip fracture, with some differences explained by sex and age. Our work sheds important insights that may help ongoing health policy discussions on equity, efficiency, and reimbursement in health care systems.

Highlights

  • Across seven countries, we find important variations in end-of-life care for patients who sustained a hip fracture, with some differences explained by sex and age

  • End-of-life care in the United States occurs more with specialists than in primary care, which is in fundamental contrast to other countries

  • We used patient-level data of seven out of the eleven countries participating in the ICCONIC collaborative, that is, all countries that could determine the exact date of death, to examine end-of-life utilization, and spending as follows: Australia (AU), Canada (CA), England (EN), Germany (DE), New Zealand (NZ), Spain (ES), and the United States (US)

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Summary

Conclusions

We find important variations in end-of-life care for patients who sustained a hip fracture, with some differences explained by sex and age. Our work sheds important insights that may help ongoing health policy discussions on equity, efficiency, and reimbursement in health care systems. KEYWORDS administrative data, age inequalities, end-of-life care, gender inequalities, health care spending, health care utilization, international comparison. Countries follow different approaches to providing end-of-life care. Health care spending and utilization increases near death. International studies of health systems mainly compare acute hospital care and lack to account for different organization of end-of-life care. End-of-life care in the United States occurs more with specialists than in primary care, which is in fundamental contrast to other countries. In most countries, health care spending and utilization decreases with age and is lower for women

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