Place of death of older persons with dementia. a study in five European countries
Place of death of older persons with dementia. a study in five European countries
The aging of the European population will lead to a rapid increase in dementia cases in the coming decades, posing challenges for the organization and provision of end-of-life care. Studying the place of death of patients with dementia, and what determines it, is relevant in this context.
Using death certificates, the deaths of people aged 65 and older whose underlying cause of death was a dementia-related disease was studied in Belgium, the Netherlands, England, Scotland, and Wales. Between 50% (Wales) and 92% (Netherlands) of patients with dementia died in a nursing home and between 3% (Netherlands) and 46% (Wales) in hospital. Home death was rare (3–5%) except in Belgium (11%). Multivariate analysis showed that place of death was related to age, sex, available hospital and nursing home beds, and country of residence. Although availability of hospital and nursing home beds partially explained the variation between countries, considerable variation remained even after controlling for that, plus age, sex, and social support.
Place of death from dementia differed significantly between the countries studied. In all countries, a majority of patients with dementia died in a long-term care facility. The provision of appropriate long-term care facilities with appropriate staffing could be the primary policy instrument that could help patients with dementia avoid dying in the hospital and ensure quality of end-of-life care in Europe.
dementia, place of death, nursing home, end-of-life care
751-756
Houttekier, Dirk
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Cohen, Joachim
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Bilsen, Johan
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Addington-Hall, Julia
87560cc4-7562-4f9b-b908-81f3b603fdd8
Onwuteaka-Philipsen, Bregje D.
257f7008-46cb-4622-9c98-77131835d612
Deliens, Luc
94dcbddb-c7bc-4a77-a11d-0e8a0b278d62
April 2010
Houttekier, Dirk
2db2e184-adfa-41e0-b137-e1b58631106f
Cohen, Joachim
b58f24af-3c90-432a-b447-b43df71044de
Bilsen, Johan
2579cde2-1f51-4d64-9680-4ed11069eeb2
Addington-Hall, Julia
87560cc4-7562-4f9b-b908-81f3b603fdd8
Onwuteaka-Philipsen, Bregje D.
257f7008-46cb-4622-9c98-77131835d612
Deliens, Luc
94dcbddb-c7bc-4a77-a11d-0e8a0b278d62
Houttekier, Dirk, Cohen, Joachim, Bilsen, Johan, Addington-Hall, Julia, Onwuteaka-Philipsen, Bregje D. and Deliens, Luc
(2010)
Place of death of older persons with dementia. a study in five European countries.
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 58 (4), .
(doi:10.1111/j.1532-5415.2010.02771.x).
Abstract
The aging of the European population will lead to a rapid increase in dementia cases in the coming decades, posing challenges for the organization and provision of end-of-life care. Studying the place of death of patients with dementia, and what determines it, is relevant in this context.
Using death certificates, the deaths of people aged 65 and older whose underlying cause of death was a dementia-related disease was studied in Belgium, the Netherlands, England, Scotland, and Wales. Between 50% (Wales) and 92% (Netherlands) of patients with dementia died in a nursing home and between 3% (Netherlands) and 46% (Wales) in hospital. Home death was rare (3–5%) except in Belgium (11%). Multivariate analysis showed that place of death was related to age, sex, available hospital and nursing home beds, and country of residence. Although availability of hospital and nursing home beds partially explained the variation between countries, considerable variation remained even after controlling for that, plus age, sex, and social support.
Place of death from dementia differed significantly between the countries studied. In all countries, a majority of patients with dementia died in a long-term care facility. The provision of appropriate long-term care facilities with appropriate staffing could be the primary policy instrument that could help patients with dementia avoid dying in the hospital and ensure quality of end-of-life care in Europe.
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Published date: April 2010
Keywords:
dementia, place of death, nursing home, end-of-life care
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Local EPrints ID: 162807
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/162807
ISSN: 0002-8614
PURE UUID: 32ae69c7-fc9c-4674-8e1c-e3f473de1c7e
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Date deposited: 31 Aug 2010 09:06
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:03
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Contributors
Author:
Dirk Houttekier
Author:
Joachim Cohen
Author:
Johan Bilsen
Author:
Bregje D. Onwuteaka-Philipsen
Author:
Luc Deliens
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