Pathway to Hospice: How Has Place of Care Before Hospice Changed with the Growth of Hospice in the United States?

Joan M. Teno, Claire K. Ankuda, Laura Keohane, David Meyers, Jennifer Bunker, Susan Mitchell, Emma Belanger, Pedro Gozalo, and Amal Trivedi

Abstract

Background:

Hospice use among Medicare decedents increased from 21.6% in 2000 to 51.6% in 2019. Whether this growth has been accompanied by more referrals to hospice directly from the community is not known.

Objective:

To assess trends in place of care before hospice enrollment.

Design:

Retrospective cohort from 2011 to 2018.

Subjects:

Medicare decedents age ≥66 years.

Measure

Location of care before hospice enrollment in the last 90 days of life, defined as: the community with and without home health, short- or long-term nursing facility, or inpatient hospital. A county-level random effects model examined changes in enrollment from the community after adjusting for admitting diagnosis, age, race/ethnicity, sex, and Medicaid participation.

Results

Among hospice enrollees (N = 7,650,933), 27.7% transitioned to hospice from the community, 31.8% transitioned from the hospital, and 10.1% transitioned after short- or long-term nursing facility stay. Rates of enrollment to hospice from the community remained stable from 35.1% in 2011 to 34.3% in 2018. After adjustment, the proportion enrolling in hospice from the community decreased by 1.2% (95% confidence interval −1.0% to 1.4%). Place of care before hospice enrollment in 2018 varied by hospice admitting diagnosis, with patients with cancer more likely to enroll from the community (39.5%) and patients with cerebrovascular accidents from the hospital (53.2%). Prior place of care varied by state, with Florida having the highest rate of the enrollment following hospitalization (47.8%).

Conclusion

Despite the growth of hospice, the site of care before hospice enrollment has remained relatively stable and was strongly influenced by region.