%0 Journal Article %J Annals of Internal Medicine %D 2017 %T The Relationship of Obesity to Hospice Use and Expenditures: A Cohort Study. %A Tamara B Harris %A Byhoff, Elena %A Chithra R Perumalswami %A Kenneth M. Langa %A Alexi A Wright %A Jennifer J Griggs %K Hospice %K Medicare/Medicaid/Health Insurance %K Obesity %K Older Adults %X

Background: Obesity complicates medical, nursing, and informal care in severe illness, but its effect on hospice use and Medicare expenditures is unknown.

Objective: To describe the associations between body mass index (BMI) and hospice use and Medicare expenditures in the last 6 months of life.

Design: Retrospective cohort.

Setting: The HRS (Health and Retirement Study).

Participants: 5677 community-dwelling Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries who died between 1998 and 2012.

Measurements: Hospice enrollment, days enrolled in hospice, in-home death, and total Medicare expenditures in the 6 months before death. BMI was modeled as a continuous variable with a quadratic functional form.

Results: For decedents with BMI of 20 kg/m2, the predicted probability of hospice enrollment was 38.3% (95% CI, 36.5% to 40.2%), hospice duration was 42.8 days (CI, 42.3 to 43.2 days), probability of in-home death was 61.3% (CI, 59.4% to 63.2%), and total Medicare expenditures were $42 803 (CI, $41 085 to $44 521). When BMI increased to 30 kg/m2, the predicted probability of hospice enrollment decreased by 6.7 percentage points (CI, -9.3 to -4.0 percentage points), hospice duration decreased by 3.8 days (CI, -4.4 to -3.1 days), probability of in-home death decreased by 3.2 percentage points (CI, -6.0 to -0.4 percentage points), and total Medicare expenditures increased by $3471 (CI, $955 to $5988). For morbidly obese decedents (BMI ≥40 kg/m2), the predicted probability of hospice enrollment decreased by 15.2 percentage points (CI, -19.6 to -10.9 percentage points), hospice duration decreased by 4.3 days (CI, -5.7 to -2.9 days), and in-home death decreased by 6.3 percentage points (CI, -11.2 to -1.5 percentage points) versus decedents with BMI of 20 kg/m2.

Limitation: Baseline data were self-reported, and the interval between reported BMI and time of death varied.

Conclusion: Among community-dwelling decedents in the HRS, increasing obesity was associated with reduced hospice use and in-home death and higher Medicare expenditures in the last 6 months of life.

Primary Funding Source: Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholars Program.

%B Annals of Internal Medicine %8 2017 Feb 07 %G eng %R 10.7326/M16-0749 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of the American Geriatrics Society %D 2016 %T Racial and Ethnic Differences in End-of-Life Medicare Expenditures. %A Byhoff, Elena %A Tamara B Harris %A Kenneth M. Langa %A Theodore J Iwashyna %K African Continental Ancestry Group %K Aged %K Aged, 80 and over %K Cohort Studies %K Comorbidity %K Cross-Cultural Comparison %K Ethnic Groups %K European Continental Ancestry Group %K Female %K Health Care Surveys %K Health Expenditures %K Hispanic Americans %K Humans %K Life Support Care %K Longitudinal Studies %K Male %K Medicare %K Rate Setting and Review %K Social Support %K Socioeconomic factors %K Terminal Care %K United States %X

OBJECTIVES: To determine to what extent demographic, social support, socioeconomic, geographic, medical, and End-of-Life (EOL) planning factors explain racial and ethnic variation in Medicare spending during the last 6 months of life.

DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study.

SETTING: Health and Retirement Study (HRS).

PARTICIPANTS: Decedents who participated in HRS between 1998 and 2012 and previously consented to survey linkage with Medicare claims (N = 7,105).

MEASUREMENTS: Total Medicare expenditures in the last 180 days of life according to race and ethnicity, controlling for demographic factors, social supports, geography, illness burden, and EOL planning factors, including presence of advance directives, discussion of EOL treatment preferences, and whether death had been expected.

RESULTS: The analysis included 5,548 (78.1%) non-Hispanic white, 1,030 (14.5%) non-Hispanic black, and 331 (4.7%) Hispanic adults and 196 (2.8%) adults of other race or ethnicity. Unadjusted results suggest that average EOL Medicare expenditures were $13,522 (35%, P < .001) more for black decedents and $16,341 (42%, P < .001) more for Hispanics than for whites. Controlling for demographic, socioeconomic, geographic, medical, and EOL-specific factors, the Medicare expenditure difference between groups fell to $8,047 (22%, P < .001) more for black and $6,855 (19%, P < .001) more for Hispanic decedents than expenditures for non-Hispanic whites. The expenditure differences between groups remained statistically significant in all models.

CONCLUSION: Individuals-level factors, including EOL planning factors do not fully explain racial and ethnic differences in Medicare spending in the last 6 months of life. Future research should focus on broader systemic, organizational, and provider-level factors to explain these differences.

%B Journal of the American Geriatrics Society %V 64 %P 1789-1797 %G eng %N 9 %R 10.1111/jgs.14263