Socioeconomic trends in palliative care: A six-year study

10/19/24 at 03:05 AM

Socioeconomic trends in palliative care: A six-year study
Cureus; by Andrej Sodoma, Muhammad Wahdan Naseeb,Samuel Greenberg, Nicholas J. Knott, Jonathan Arias, Argirios Skulikidis, Mary Makaryus; 10/24
Our study investigates trends in PC utilization, focusing on socioeconomic characteristics. The National Inpatient Sample (NIS) from 2015 to 2020 was used to identify adults hospitalized in the United States (US). International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10), was used for PC encounters, code Z51.5. An equal number of random records, stratified by year and without this code, were selected to serve as controls [5.2M visits]. Men were more likely to receive PC consults. Medicare/Medicaid holders’ PC access was limited compared to private insurance holders. Racial minorities, particularly Hispanics and Blacks, were less likely to engage in PC. Compared to urban teaching hospitals, rural hospitals had a decreased rate of PC utilization. Smaller hospitals had significantly fewer PC referrals than large hospitals. A lower socioeconomic status was associated with a reduced propensity to utilize PC services compared to an upper socioeconomic status.

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