Health Policy Manag.  2017 Jun;27(2):167-176. 10.4332/KJHPA.2017.27.2.167.

Impact of Community Health Care Resources on the Place of Death of Older Persons with Dementia in South Korea Using Public Administrative Big Data

Affiliations
  • 1Health Insurance Review and Assessment Service, Wonju, Korea.
  • 2Department of Public Health Science, Graduate School of Public Health, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea. hk65@snu.ac.kr
  • 3Institute of Aging, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea.
  • 4Institute of Health and Environment, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

BACKGROUND
This study aimed to analyze the impact of community health care resources on the place of death of older adults with dementia compared to those with cancer in South Korea, using public administrative big data.
METHODS
Based on a literature review, we selected person- and community-level variables that can affect older people's decisions about where to die. Data on place-of-death and person-level attributes were obtained from the 2013 death certification micro data from Statistics Korea. Data on the population and economic and health care resources in the community where the older deceased resided were obtained from various open public administrative big data including databases on the local tax and resident population statistics, health care resources and infrastructure statistics, and long-term care (LTC) insurance statistics. Community-level data were linked to the death certificate micro data through the town (si-gun-gu) code of the residence of the deceased. Multi-level logistic regression models were used to simultaneously estimate the impacts of community as well as individual-level factors on the place of death.
RESULTS
In both the dementia (76.1%) and cancer (87.1%) decedent groups, most older people died in the hospital. Among the older deceased with dementia, hospital death was less likely to occur when the older person resided in a community with a higher supply of LTC facility beds, but hospital death was more likely to occur in communities with a higher supply of LTC hospital beds. Similarly, among the cancer group, the likelihood of a hospital death was significantly lower in communities with a higher supply of LTC facility beds, but was higher in communities with a higher supply of acute care hospital beds. As for individual-level factors, being female and having no spouse were associated with the likelihood of hospital death among older people with dementia.
CONCLUSION
More than three in four older people with dementia die in the hospital, while home is reported to be the place of death preferred by Koreans. To decrease this gap, an increase in the supply of end-of-life (EOL) care at home and in community-based service settings is necessary. EOL care should also be incorporated as an essential part of LTC. Changes in the perception of EOL care by older people and their families are also critical in their decisions about the place of death, and should be supported by public education and other related non-medical, social approaches.

Keyword

End of life care; Hospices; Dementia; Neoplasms; Hospital death; Big data

MeSH Terms

Adult
Certification
Community Health Services*
Death Certificates
Delivery of Health Care
Dementia*
Education
Female
Hospices
Humans
Insurance
Korea*
Logistic Models
Long-Term Care
Population Characteristics
Spouses
Taxes
Terminal Care
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