Elizabeth H. Bradley, Ph.D., Holly Prigerson, Ph.D., Melissa D.A. Carlson, M.P.H., M.B.A., Emily Cherlin, M.S.W., R. Johnson-Hurzeler, R.N., M.P.H., and Stanislav V. Kasl, Ph.D.
OBJECTIVE: Many terminally ill patients enroll in a hospice
late in their illness, and recent data indicate decreasing lengths
of hospice enrollment, yet we know little about the impact of
hospice enrollment length on surviving caregivers. This is the
first study the authors know of that examines the association
between hospice enrollment length and subsequent major depressive
disorder among surviving caregivers.
METHOD: The authors conducted
a prospective cohort study with 174 primary family caregivers
of consecutively enrolled hospice patients with cancer between
October 1999 and September 2001. Using data from in-person interviews
at the time of enrollment and 6–8 months after the patient’s
death, they estimated with logistic regression the adjusted
risk of major depressive disorder with the Structured Clinical
Interview for the DSM-IV axis I modules based on the number
of days of hospice care before death.
RESULTS: Caregivers of
patients enrolled with hospice for 3 or fewer days were significantly
more likely to have major depressive disorder at the follow-up
interview than caregivers of those with longer hospice enrollment
(24.1% versus 9.0%, respectively), adjusted for baseline major
depressive disorder and other potential confounders.
CONCLUSIONS: The findings identify a target group for whom bereavement services
might be most needed. The authors also suggest that earlier
hospice enrollment may help reduce the risk of major depressive
disorder during the first 6–8 months of bereavement, which
raises concerns about recent trends toward decreasing lengths
of hospice enrollment before death.