Abstract

BackgroundAn important aspect of end-of-life care is the place of death. A majority of cancer patients prefer home death to hospital death. At the same time, the actual location of death is often against patient’s last-known wish. The aim of this study was to analyze whether socioeconomic factors influence if Swedish palliative cancer patients die at home or at a hospital. There is no previous study on location of death encompassing several years in Swedish cancer patients.MethodsData was collected from the Swedish Register of Palliative Care for patients diagnosed with brain tumor, lung, colorectal, prostate or breast cancer recorded between 2011 and 2014. The data was linked to the Swedish Cancer Register, the Cause of Death Register and the Longitudinal Integration Database for health-insurance and labor-market studies. A total of 8990 patients were included.ResultsWe found that marital status was the factor that seemed to affect the place of death. Lack of a partner, compared to being married, was associated with a higher likelihood of dying at a hospital.ConclusionOur findings are in line with similar earlier studies encompassing only 1 year and based on patients in other countries. Whether inequalities at least partly explain the differences remains to be investigated. Patients dying of cancer in Sweden, who do not have a life partner, may not have the option of dying at home due to lack of informal support. Perhaps the need of extensive community support services to enable home death have to improve, and further studies are warranted to answer this question.

Highlights

  • An important aspect of end-of-life care is the place of death

  • Record linkage was made between Swedish Register of Palliative Care (SRPC) and the Swedish Cancer Register (SCR) by using the personal identity numbers assigned to all Swedish permanent citizens at birth [9]

  • For patients with lung cancer, the likelihood of dying at a hospital compared to dying at home was significantly higher for divorced, unmarried and widowed patients compared to married patients, holding all other predictors constant

Read more

Summary

Introduction

An important aspect of end-of-life care is the place of death. A majority of cancer patients prefer home death to hospital death. The aim of this study was to analyze whether socioeconomic factors influence if Swedish palliative cancer patients die at home or at a hospital. There is no previous study on location of death encompassing several years in Swedish cancer patients. A majority of cancer patients across all socioeconomic groups prefer home death to hospital death [2, 3]. One previous Swedish study, focusing on 1 year only, has shown associations between socioeconomic factors (such as educational level and marital status) and place of death, indicating that socioeconomic inequalities influence end-of-life care [6]. The aim of the current study, which encompasses several years, is to analyze whether socioeconomic factors such as educational level, income and marital status influence if Swedish palliative patients die at home or at a hospital

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call