Does hospital at home for palliative care facilitate death at home? Randomised controlled trial

被引:83
作者
Grande, GE [1 ]
Todd, CJ [1 ]
Barclay, SIG [1 ]
Farquhar, MC [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cambridge, Inst Publ Hlth, Dept Community Med,Hlth Serv Res Grp, Gen Practice & Primary Care Res Unit, Cambridge CB2 2SR, England
关键词
D O I
10.1136/bmj.319.7223.1472
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Objective To evaluate the impact on place of death of a hospital at home service for palliative care. Design Pragmatic randomised controlled trial. Setting Former Cambridge health district. Participants 229 patients referred to the hospital at home service; 43 randomised to control group (standard care), 186 randomised to hospital at home. Intervention Hospital at home versus standard care. Main outcome measures Place of death. Results Twenty five (58%,) control patients died at home compared with 124 (67%) patients allocated to hospital at home. This difference was not significant; intention to treat analysis did not show that hospital at home increased the number of deaths at home. Seventy three patients randomised to hospital at home were not admitted to the service. Patients admitted to hospital at home were significantly more likely to die at home (88/113; 78%) than control patients. It is not possible to determine whether this was due to hospital at home itself or other characteristics of the patients admitted to the service. The study attained less statistical power than initially planned. Conclusion In a locality with good provision of standard community care we could not show that hospital at home allowed more patients: to die at home, although neither does the study refute this. Problems relating to recruitment, attrition, and the vulnerability of the patient group make randomised controlled trials in palliative care difficult While these difficulties have to be recognised they are not insurmountable with the appropriate resourcing and setting.
引用
收藏
页码:1472 / 1475
页数:4
相关论文
共 20 条
[1]  
ADDINGTON-HALL J M, 1991, Palliative Medicine, V5, P207, DOI 10.1177/026921639100500305
[2]   RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL OF EFFECTS OF COORDINATING CARE FOR TERMINALLY ILL CANCER-PATIENTS [J].
ADDINGTONHALL, JM ;
MACDONALD, LD ;
ANDERSON, HR ;
CHAMBERLAIN, J ;
FREELING, P ;
BLAND, JM ;
RAFTERY, J .
BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 1992, 305 (6865) :1317-1322
[3]  
Boyd K. J., 1994, Annals Academy of Medicine Singapore, V23, P271
[4]   PATIENT PREFERENCES AND RANDOMIZED CLINICAL-TRIALS [J].
BREWIN, CR ;
BRADLEY, C .
BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 1989, 299 (6694) :313-315
[5]   Cluster randomised trials: time for improvement - The implications of adopting a cluster design are still largely being ignored [J].
Campbell, MK ;
Grimshaw, JM .
BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 1998, 317 (7167) :1171-1172
[6]  
CARTWRIGHT A, 1991, BRIT J GEN PRACT, V41, P271
[7]   ATTITUDES TOWARDS CARE OF THE DYING - A QUESTIONNAIRE SURVEY OF GENERAL-PRACTICE ATTENDERS [J].
CHARLTON, RC .
FAMILY PRACTICE, 1991, 8 (04) :356-359
[8]   COST-EFFECTIVENESS OF VETERANS-ADMINISTRATION HOSPITAL-BASED HOME CARE - A RANDOMIZED CLINICAL-TRIAL [J].
CUMMINGS, JE ;
HUGHES, SL ;
WEAVER, FM ;
MANHEIM, LM ;
CONRAD, KJ ;
NASH, K ;
BRAUN, B ;
ADELMAN, J .
ARCHIVES OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, 1990, 150 (06) :1274-1280
[9]  
DUNLOP RJ, 1989, PALLIATIVE MED, V3, P197, DOI DOI 10.1177/026921638900300305
[10]  
Hinton John, 1994, Palliative Medicine, V8, P197, DOI 10.1177/026921639400800303