Abstract
Whole-person care is a new paradigm for serious illness, but few programs have been robustly studied. We sought to test the effect of LifeCourse (LC), a person-centered program for patients living with serious illness, on health-care utilization, care experience, and quality of life, employing a quasi-experimental design with a Usual Care (UC) comparison group. The study was conducted 2012 to 2017 at an upper-Midwest not-for-profit health-care system with outcomes measured every 3 months until the end of life. Enrolled patients (N ¼ 903) were estimated to be within 3 years of end of life and diagnosed with 1þ serious illness. Exclusion criteria included hospice enrollment at time of screening or active dying. Community health workers (CHWs) delivered standardized monthly 1-hour home visits based on palliative care guidelines and motivational interviewing to promote patients' physical, psychosocial, and financial well-being. Primary outcomes included health-care utilization and patient-and caregiver-experience and quality of life. Patients were elderly (LC 74, UC 78 years) and primarily non-Hispanic, white, living at home with cardiovascular disease as the primary diagnosis (LC 69%, UC 57%). A higher proportion of LC patients completed advance directives (N ¼ 173, 38%) than UC patients (N ¼ 66, 15%; P <.001). LifeCourse patients who died spent more days in hospice (88 + 191 days) compared to UC patients (44 + 71 days; P ¼ .018). LifeCourse patients reported greater improvements than UC in communication as part of the care experience (P ¼ .016). Implementation of person-centered programs delivered by CHWs is feasible; inexpensive upstream expansion of palliative care models can yield benefits for patients and caregivers. Trial Registration: Trial NCT01746446 was registered on November 27, 2012 at ClinicalTrials.gov.
Original language | English (US) |
---|---|
Journal | American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Dec 13 2018 |
Keywords
- care navigator
- community health worker
- late life
- palliative care
- person-centered program
- whole-person care
PubMed: MeSH publication types
- Journal Article
- Clinical Study