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Population-based study of dying in hospital in six European countries

Population-based study of dying in hospital in six European countries
Population-based study of dying in hospital in six European countries
This study examined the proportion of deaths taking place in hospitals in six European countries in relation to demographic, epidemiologic and healthcare factors. Retrospective analyses were performed on a database integrating death certificate data of all deaths in 2002 in Sweden and 2003 in Belgium, England, Scotland, the Netherlands and Wales (N = 891,780). Data were linked with regional healthcare statistics. Of all deaths, from 33.9% (the Netherlands) to 62.8% (Wales) occurred in hospital. Large country differences in hospital deaths were partly explained by the availability of care home and hospital beds. Differences between countries were strikingly large in older patients and cancer patients. Older patients had a higher probability of dying in hospital in Sweden, Scotland, England and Wales than in Flanders and, in particular, in the Netherlands. Cancer patients often died in hospitals in Sweden but less frequently so in the Netherlands and England. Country differences in the proportion of patients dying in hospital are only partly the result of differences in health care provision, and are in particular larger for certain patient categories, suggesting country-specific end-of-life practices in these categories. These findings can contribute to rational public health policies aimed at reducing hospital deaths.
death, death certificates, health services, hospitals, terminal care
0269-2163
702-710
Cohen, J.
6eddab3c-5a4d-458d-bcf9-c03812e057ea
Bilsen, J.
2f7364f9-ba6b-4f7f-9728-679b660c2d9f
Addington-Hall, J.
87560cc4-7562-4f9b-b908-81f3b603fdd8
Löfmark, R.
1e6d2da3-53ca-49c9-9fdc-cec54e6de7aa
Miccinesi, G.
36cbb6b3-04e1-41e5-a3fb-065f633f31e6
Kaasa, S.
73d70abb-d34e-406f-934e-b35489d50451
Onwuteaka-Philipsen, B.
83189262-4489-4743-a7d0-b97a6d7d04df
Deliens, L.
5a6d963a-bb44-4291-97c6-fd78dafa51d4
Cohen, J.
6eddab3c-5a4d-458d-bcf9-c03812e057ea
Bilsen, J.
2f7364f9-ba6b-4f7f-9728-679b660c2d9f
Addington-Hall, J.
87560cc4-7562-4f9b-b908-81f3b603fdd8
Löfmark, R.
1e6d2da3-53ca-49c9-9fdc-cec54e6de7aa
Miccinesi, G.
36cbb6b3-04e1-41e5-a3fb-065f633f31e6
Kaasa, S.
73d70abb-d34e-406f-934e-b35489d50451
Onwuteaka-Philipsen, B.
83189262-4489-4743-a7d0-b97a6d7d04df
Deliens, L.
5a6d963a-bb44-4291-97c6-fd78dafa51d4

Cohen, J., Bilsen, J., Addington-Hall, J., Löfmark, R., Miccinesi, G., Kaasa, S., Onwuteaka-Philipsen, B. and Deliens, L. (2008) Population-based study of dying in hospital in six European countries. Palliative Medicine, 22 (6), 702-710. (doi:10.1177/0269216308092285).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This study examined the proportion of deaths taking place in hospitals in six European countries in relation to demographic, epidemiologic and healthcare factors. Retrospective analyses were performed on a database integrating death certificate data of all deaths in 2002 in Sweden and 2003 in Belgium, England, Scotland, the Netherlands and Wales (N = 891,780). Data were linked with regional healthcare statistics. Of all deaths, from 33.9% (the Netherlands) to 62.8% (Wales) occurred in hospital. Large country differences in hospital deaths were partly explained by the availability of care home and hospital beds. Differences between countries were strikingly large in older patients and cancer patients. Older patients had a higher probability of dying in hospital in Sweden, Scotland, England and Wales than in Flanders and, in particular, in the Netherlands. Cancer patients often died in hospitals in Sweden but less frequently so in the Netherlands and England. Country differences in the proportion of patients dying in hospital are only partly the result of differences in health care provision, and are in particular larger for certain patient categories, suggesting country-specific end-of-life practices in these categories. These findings can contribute to rational public health policies aimed at reducing hospital deaths.

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More information

Published date: September 2008
Keywords: death, death certificates, health services, hospitals, terminal care

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 64578
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/64578
ISSN: 0269-2163
PURE UUID: b80e68c9-ef7d-4a2f-8252-096fd6aa23c1

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Date deposited: 05 Jan 2009
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 11:59

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Contributors

Author: J. Cohen
Author: J. Bilsen
Author: R. Löfmark
Author: G. Miccinesi
Author: S. Kaasa
Author: B. Onwuteaka-Philipsen
Author: L. Deliens

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