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Advance directives completion and hospital out‐of‐pocket expenditures

Yujun Zhu, Susan Enguídanos

2022Journal of Hospital Medicine15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Health care costs remain high at the end of life. It is not known if there is a relationship between advance directive (AD) completion and hospital out-of-pocket costs. This analysis investigated whether AD completion was associated with lower hospital out-of-pocket costs at end of life. METHODS: We used Health and Retirement Study participants who died between 2000 and 2014 (N = 9228) to examine the association between AD completion status and hospital out-of-pocket spending in the last 2 years of life through the use of a two-part model controlling for socioeconomic status, death-related characteristics and health insurance coverage. RESULTS: About 44% of decedents had completed ADs. Having an AD was significantly associated with $673 lower hospital out-of-pocket costs, with a higher magnitude of savings among younger decedents. Decedents who completed ADs 3 months or less before death had higher out-of-pocket costs ($1854 on average) than those who completed ADs more than 3 months before death ($1176 on average). CONCLUSIONS: AD completion was significantly associated with lower hospital out-of-pocket costs, with greater out-of-pocket savings among younger decedents. Early AD completers experienced lower costs than decedents who completed ADs closer to death.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineHospital medicineMEDLINEMedical emergencyFamily medicineLawPolitical sciencePalliative Care and End-of-Life IssuesHealth Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of LifeHealthcare Decision-Making and Restraints
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