Relationship between use of general practice and healthcare costs at the end of life: a data linkage study in New South Wales, Australia

BMJ Open. 2016 Jan 7;6(1):e009410. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-009410.

Abstract

Objective: This analysis investigated the relationships between healthcare expenditures in the last 6 months of life and use of general practitioner (GP) services in the preceding 12-month period among older residents of New South Wales, Australia.

Methods: Questionnaire data (2006-2009) for more than 260,000 people aged 45 years and over were linked to individual hospital and death records and cost data. For 14,819 participants who died during follow-up, generalised linear mixed models were used to explore the relationships between costs of hospital, emergency department (ED) and Medicare-funded outpatient and pharmaceutical services in the last 6 months of life, and quintile of GP use in the 18-7 months before death. Analyses were adjusted for age at death, sex, educational level, language, private health insurance, household income, self-reported health status, functional limitation, psychological distress, number of comorbidities and geographic clustering.

Results: Almost 85% of decedents had at least one hospitalisation in the last 6 months, and the mean (median) of total cost for each person in this period was $A20,453 (14,835). There was no significant difference in the hospital cost, including cost for preventable hospitalisations in the last 6 months of life, across quintiles of GP use in the 18-7 months before death. Participants in the lowest quintile of GP use incurred more ED costs, but ED costs were similar across the other quintiles of GP use. Costs for Medicare-funded outpatient services and pharmaceuticals increased steeply according to quintile of GP use.

Conclusions: In the Australian setting, there was no association between use of GP services in the 18-7 months before death and hospital costs in the last 6 months, but there was significant association with higher costs for outpatient services and pharmaceuticals. However, there was some indication that limited GP access might be associated with increased ED use at end of life.

Keywords: PRIMARY CARE.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Ambulatory Care*
  • Delivery of Health Care / economics*
  • Drug Costs
  • Emergency Service, Hospital
  • Female
  • General Practice*
  • Health Care Costs*
  • Health Expenditures
  • Health Services* / economics
  • Health Services* / statistics & numerical data
  • Hospital Costs
  • Hospitalization*
  • Hospitals
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Medicare
  • Middle Aged
  • New South Wales
  • Surveys and Questionnaires
  • Terminal Care / economics
  • Terminal Care / methods*
  • United States