1. Healthcare use and out‐of‐pocket costs for rural family caregivers and care recipients in a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Kaufman, Brystana G., Huang, Ro W., Holland, Diane E., Vanderboom, Catherine E., Ingram, Cory, Wild, Ellen M., Dose, Ann Marie, Stiles, Carole, Gustavson, Allison M., Mandrekar, Jay, Van Houtven, Courtney H., and Griffin, Joan M.
- Subjects
MEDICAL care use ,MEDICALLY underserved areas ,SELF-evaluation ,PATIENTS' families ,HOME care services ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,CRITICALLY ill ,PATIENTS ,RESEARCH funding ,OUTPATIENT services in hospitals ,MEDICAL personnel ,INDEPENDENT living ,STATISTICAL sampling ,HOSPITAL care ,TRAVEL ,OUTPATIENT medical care ,SERVICES for caregivers ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,EMERGENCY medical services ,CATASTROPHIC illness ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,TRANSITIONAL care ,CAREGIVERS ,TRANSPORTATION ,FOOD ,ODDS ratio ,BURDEN of care ,RURAL conditions ,RESEARCH ,COMMUNICATION ,QUALITY of life ,COUNSELING ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DATA analysis software ,MEDICAL care costs ,REGRESSION analysis ,MENTAL depression - Abstract
Background: Rural family caregivers (FCGs) in the United States often experience high economic costs. This randomized controlled trial compared a transitional palliative care intervention (TPC) to support FCGs of seriously ill care recipients (CRs) to an attention control condition. We evaluated the TPC's effect on healthcare use and out‐of‐pocket spending for both FCGs and CRs. Methods: TPC FCGs received teaching, guidance, and counseling via video calls for 8 weeks following CR discharge from the hospital. After discharge, a research assistant called all FCGs once a month for up to 6 months or CR death to collect self‐reported healthcare utilization (e.g., outpatient, emergency department, and hospital), out‐of‐pocket healthcare spending (e.g., deductibles and coinsurance), and health‐related travel costs (e.g., transportation, lodging, food) for FCGs and CRs. Incidence rate ratios (IRRs) were estimated using negative binomial regressions. Results: The study included 282 FCG–CR dyads across three U.S. states. Follow‐up over the 6‐month period was shortened by high CR mortality rates across both arms (29%), but was similar across arms. TPC reduced nights in the hospital for CR (IRR = 0.75; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.56–0. 99). Total out‐of‐pocket spending was not significantly different for TPC versus control. Across both groups, mean out‐of‐pocket spending for dyads was $1401.85, with healthcare payments contributing $1048.58 and transportation expenses contributing $136.79. TPC dyads reported lower lodging costs (IRR = 0.71; 95% CI = 0.56–0.89). Conclusions: This study contributes to evidence that palliative care interventions reduce the number of nights in the hospital for seriously ill patients. Yet, overall rural FCGs and seriously ill CRs experience substantial out‐of‐pocket economic costs in the 6 months following hospitalization. Transitional care intervention design should consider impacts on patient and caregiver spending. Clinicaltrials.gov # is NCT03339271. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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