Where Adults With Heart Failure Die: Insights From the CDC-WONDER Database.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

6-2025

Publication Title

Circulation. Heart failure

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Heart failure (HF) is associated with high mortality rates and substantial health care costs. While there is growing emphasis on integrating palliative care for patients with HF, limited data exist on the locations where adults with HF spend their final days. The study aimed to analyze the location and circumstances of death among adults with HF in the United States using Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Wide-ranging Online Data for epidemiological Research data.

METHODS: Mortality data from individuals aged ≥20 years, with HF listed as the cause of death between 1999 and 2023, were analyzed. The places of death were categorized as the emergency room, hospice/nursing home, inpatient medical facility, or home. Multinomial logistic regression was performed to examine the associations between demographic factors and death location.

RESULTS: HF-related mortality rates declined from 1999 (3.60% and 143.6 age-adjusted mortality rate) to 2010 (3.47% and 123.1 age-adjusted mortality rate). However, rates gradually increased thereafter, reaching 5.18% and 168.1 age-adjusted mortality rate in 2023. Deaths at home nearly doubled, rising from 18.41% (50 648 of 275 132) in 1999 to 33.47% (132 470 of 395 826) in 2023. Hospice/nursing home deaths increased from 30.95% (85 144 of 275 132) in 1999 to 34.71% (116 634 of 336 014) in 2017, but declined to 29.54% (116 931 of 395 826) by 2023. Young adults (20-34 years) had the highest proportion of inpatient deaths. Sex, ethnicity, and urbanization were significant predictors of death location, with men, White individuals, and those in large metropolitan areas more likely to die in medical facilities.

CONCLUSIONS: This study underscores the shifting trends in the locations of death among patients with HF, with a ≈2-fold increase in HF-related deaths occurring at home over the past 2 decades. The recent decline in hospice/nursing home deaths, following a period of steady growth, calls for an in-depth examination of contributing barriers. Further research is essential to understand the sociodemographic factors driving disparities in HF-related death locations.

Volume

18

Issue

6

First Page

e012447

DOI

10.1161/CIRCHEARTFAILURE.124.012447

ISSN

1941-3297

PubMed ID

40376797

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