Heterogeneity and changes in preferences for dying at home: a systematic review
King's College London · Cicely Saunders International
Abstract
Home-based models of hospice and palliative care are promoted with the argument that most people prefer to die at home. We examined the heterogeneity in preferences for home death and explored, for the first time, changes of preference with illness progression.
We searched for studies on adult preferences for place of care at the end of life or place of death in MEDLINE (1966-2011), EMBASE (1980-2011), psycINFO (1967-2011), CINAHL (1982-2011), six palliative care journals (2006-11) and reference lists. Standard criteria were used to grade study quality and evidence strength. Scatter plots showed the percentage preferring home death amongst patients, lay caregivers and general public, by study quality, year, weighted by sample size.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 54.89
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 74
Authors
5- BGBárbara GomesCorresponding
King's College London, Cicely Saunders International
- NCNatália Calanzani
King's College London, Cicely Saunders International
- MGMarjolein Gysels
Cicely Saunders International, King's College London
- SHSue Hall
King's College London, Cicely Saunders International
- IJIrene J Higginson
Cicely Saunders International, King's College London
Topics & keywords
- CINAHL
- Palliative care
- Medicine
- PsycINFO
- Preference
- MEDLINE
- Place of death
- Gerontology