宗教性
偏爱
多项式logistic回归
灵性
医学
临终关怀
种族(生物学)
白色(突变)
老年学
人口学
家庭医学
缓和医疗
心理学
护理部
社会心理学
替代医学
病理
化学
微观经济学
经济
社会学
机器学习
基因
生物
植物
生物化学
计算机科学
作者
John G. Cagle,Michael A. LaMantia,Sharon W. Williams,Jolynn Pek,Lloyd J. Edwards
标识
DOI:10.1177/1049909115593936
摘要
The purpose of this study was to identify predictors of preference for hospice care and explore whether the effect of these predictors on preference for hospice care were moderated by race. Methods: An analysis of the North Carolina AARP End of Life Survey (N = 3035) was conducted using multinomial logistic modeling to identify predictors of preference for hospice care. Response options included yes, no, or don’t know. Results: Fewer black respondents reported a preference for hospice (63.8% vs 79.2% for white respondents, P < .001). While the proportion of black and white respondents expressing a clear preference against hospice was nearly equal (4.5% and 4.0%, respectively), black individuals were nearly twice as likely to report a preference of “don’t know” (31.5% vs 16.8%). Gender, race, age, income, knowledge of Medicare coverage of hospice, presence of an advance directive, end-of-life care concerns, and religiosity/spirituality predicted hospice care preference. Religiosity/spirituality however, was moderated by race. Race interacted with religiosity/spirituality in predicting hospice care preference such that religiosity/spirituality promoted hospice care preference among White respondents, but not black respondents. Conclusions: Uncertainties about hospice among African Americans may contribute to disparities in utilization. Efforts to improve access to hospice should consider pre-existing preferences for end-of-life care and account for the complex demographic, social, and cultural factors that help shape these preferences.
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