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Ann Geriatr Med Res > Volume 25(1); 2021 > Article
Ikeda and Tsuboya: Place of Death and Density of Homecare Resources: A Nationwide Study in Japan

Abstract

Background

Although more than half of the population of Japan wants to spend their last days at home, approximately only 10% are able to do so. This study examined the associations between death at home and healthcare facility density by municipality based on the analysis of nationwide observed data in Japan.

Methods

We used data on deaths at home and healthcare resources in municipalities across Japan for the fiscal years 2014 and 2017. The proportions of deaths at home by municipality were used as the dependent variable, while healthcare resources (e.g., hospital density) divided by the population of older people in each municipality and municipality-level income were used as independent variables. We applied a fixed-effects regression analysis to examine the association of healthcare resources and municipality-level income with death at home.

Results

Clinics providing home medical care and facilities providing visiting nursing services were positively associated with death at home, with coefficients (95% confidence intervals) of 2.14 (1.12 to 3.15) and 2.19 (0.99 to 3.39), respectively. Stratified analysis showed that these associations were observed in higher income-level municipalities but not in lower income-level municipalities.

Conclusion

Municipalities with a higher density of home care services had higher rates of death at home, whereas municipalities with a higher density of hospitals had lower rates. We recommend the development of policy that allows hospitals to be converted into home care providers so that more people can spend time in peace at home at the end of their lives.

INTRODUCTION

Many people wish to choose their place of death (POD). Most people in high-income countries have a desire to die outside hospitals, that is, at home or in a care home, if their disease situation is difficult to cure. According to a national report, more than half of Japanese people stated they would prefer to die at home;1,2) however, it is not an easy task to ensure that one does. The government report in 2018 estimated that 72% of Japanese deaths occurred in hospitals.3) In the United States, however, the percentage of deaths at home is on the rise, surpassing hospitals as the number one POD in 2017.4) The reason many people want to spend their last days at home is to have a good death. A “good death” has a variety of components, such as a particular death process, a pain-free death, religious and spiritual needs met, emotional well-being, completion of life, treatment preferences, dignity, family, and quality of life.5) The quality of death at home is reported to be better than that in palliative care units or hospitals.6) Without appropriate arrangements for end-of-life care, people often end up being transferred to subacute or acute care settings before death and experience lower-quality terminal care.7,8)
In Japan, home healthcare has become more widespread since 2006 when the insurance system first included home healthcare support clinics.9) Since then, the Japanese government has been fine tuning the medical fee system, revising it every 2 years to reward medical institutions that provide end-of-life care at home and increasing incentives for medical institutions that provide end-of-life care at home around the clock. This policy is based on the government’s vision of a “Community-based Integrated Care System,” which aims to ensure the comprehensive provision of healthcare, preventive care, nursing care, and housing in each community by 2025.10) The prefectural government is responsible for the medical care delivery system, while the municipal government is responsible for the long-term care delivery system, which are linked to achieve the government’s vision.10,11) Therefore, it is important to better understand how more people can achieve a death in their chosen location, which in most cases, is at home.
Previous studies have reported factors affecting POD. Besides people’s wishes concerning their POD, medical factors, including symptom control,12) availability of multidisciplinary home palliative care13) or home care support medical service,14) and cancer as opposed to other diagnoses,4) also influence whether or not people can end their lives at home. Additional to medical factors are social factors, such as living alone,15) having caregiver support,16) and caregivers’ coping skills or educational attainment.17) Although some studies have evaluated factors affecting POD, they have limitations. For instance, some studies evaluated only individual-level factors associated with POD,18-21) and information on area-level factors that affect POD remains largely unexplored.22)
One example of area-level factors is the income level of the area. People living in the poorest communities may be more likely to die in hospitals than people living in affluent neighborhoods in high-income countries.17) Only one cross-sectional study from Japan using nationwide data reported an association between higher municipality-level income and higher rates of death at home.14) However, this study was a cross-sectional study, and it remains unclear whether area-level income is associated with POD. In many countries, there is a large gap between people’s wishes and where they eventually die. It is natural to assume that local healthcare resources affect the POD. One Japanese cross-sectional study reported a positive association between the density of home visiting clinics and higher rates of death at home; however, the authors14) did not consider local healthcare resources such as home-visit nursing offices. In Japan and other countries, the densities of home-visiting clinics or nursing offices vary across municipalities or prefectures. While these considerable differences in local healthcare resources are assumed to affect POD, no quantitative studies have analyzed this association. We hypothesized that local healthcare resources such as the density of clinics, hospitals, home-visiting nursing offices, and different types of care facilities would affect people’s choice of POD. Thus, this study examined the association between the percentages of deaths at home and the density of home-visiting medical care services by municipality using nationwide public data in Japan.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Data

We used public data provided by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare on deaths at home and healthcare resources (e.g., hospital density) across all 1,741 municipalities.23) Data from the fiscal years (FYs) of 2014 and 2017 were used. We constructed two-wave panel data. No ethical approval was obtained as we used only publicly available data.

Variables

We defined the proportion of deaths at home by municipality as the dependent variable. The POD in Japan is recorded on a physician-written death certificate. We defined the densities of the following healthcare resources as independent variables: (1) clinics, (2) hospitals, (3) home care support hospitals, (4) home care support clinics, (5) hospitals providing home visit medical care, (6) clinics providing home visit medical care, (7) hospitals/clinics/nursing stations providing home-visit nursing care, (8) long-term care hospital beds, (9) long-term healthcare facility beds, (10) rooms in special nursing homes for older adults, (11) small-scale multifunction home care offices, and (12) composite service offices. Home care support hospitals/clinics (#3/#4) were defined as those that specialized in 24-hour home care support and were approved by the government based on facility requirements.24) In Japan, clinics and hospitals are defined as those with ≤20 and >20 beds, respectively. The requirement for home care support hospitals/clinics involves attending physicians or nurses to maintain a system that allows 24-hour contact with patients and their families and cooperating with local long-term care and welfare service providers. More details on the requirement are described elsewhere.24) Other hospitals/home clinics not approved but providing home visit medical care were categorized into variables listed in #5 or #6. Composite service offices (#12) were defined as those providing home-visit nursing care in addition to care services offered by small-scale multifunction-type home care offices. In Japan, more than 90% of deaths occurred in people aged 65 years and older in 2017.25) Moreover, many users of the healthcare resource used in our analysis were older people. Thus, all the variables were included in the analytic models after being divided by the population of the older residents in each municipality (shown as “per 1,000 of the municipality-level population” in the tables). Data on municipality-level income (per capita income of the municipality) in each FY were obtained from the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications.26)

Statistical Analysis

We used a fixed-effects regression model with robust standard errors to examine the associations between healthcare resources and municipality-level income and deaths at home. This model estimated within-municipality changes in the proportions of deaths at home (dependent variable) regressed on changes in the independent variables described above. We developed a multivariate model that included all independent variables (Model 1). We then constructed a second model that added an interaction term between municipality-level income and significant variables to confirm whether the effect of healthcare resources on death at home differed by income level (Model 2). The municipality-level income variable used in the interaction term was dichotomized according to income data from 2014. We also performed a stratified analysis according to income level in 2014. All analyses were conducted using Stata version 16.0 (Stata Corp, College Station, TX).

RESULTS

The proportions of deaths at home in each prefecture according to the year of investigation are presented in Table 1. Overall, the average proportion of deaths at home in Japan increased slightly from 12.8% in 2014 to 13.2% in 2017. Among the 47 prefectures, the proportion of deaths at home increased the most in Tokyo, by 4.6% from 2014 to 2017 (Table 1). Table 2 shows the changes in the area-level factors between 2014 and 2017.
The results of the multivariate fixed-effects regression models are shown in Table 3. Our regression models showed that death at home was positively associated with the density of clinics providing home visit medical care and hospitals/clinics/nursing stations/nurse stations providing home-visit nursing care, with coefficients (95% confidence intervals [CIs]) of 2.14 (1.12 to 3.15) and 2.19 (0.99 to 3.39), respectively. The densities of hospitals, long-term care hospital beds, long-term healthcare facilities, and small-scale multifunction-type home care offices were inversely associated with death at home (Model 1). For instance, the density of hospitals was negatively associated with death at home with a coefficient (95% CI) of −3.93 (−7.45 to −0.40). Although area-level income was not associated with death at home, several interaction terms of income level in 2014 with the density of healthcare resources (hospitals/clinics/nursing stations providing home-visit nursing guidance, long-term healthcare facilities, and small-scale multifunction home care offices) were significant (Model 2).
Table 4 shows our stratified analysis by municipality income level in 2014. In higher-income municipalities, the densities of home care support clinics, clinics providing home visit medical care, and hospitals/clinics/nursing stations providing home-visit nursing and guidance were positively associated with death at home. However, these associations were not observed in lower income municipalities. In contrast, the density of hospitals was negatively associated with death at home in lower-income municipalities but not in higher-income municipalities.

DISCUSSION

Using comprehensive empirical data on Japanese municipalities, we showed a significant positive association between the rates of death at home and the density of clinics providing home-visit medical care. In addition, the density of facilities providing nursing services was positively associated with death at home. Conversely, the density of hospitals or long-term care facilities, as well as non-medical care facilities, was negatively associated with home death.
The main finding of our study was the positive association between death at home and the density of clinics providing home visit medical care, which is consistent with that of a previous study.14) We further added robust evidence using two-wave panel data that higher hospital bed density may lead to a lower death rate at home.14) We observed a significant association between death at home and home care support clinics but not home care support hospitals. This discordance might be explained by the differences in the roles of these two facilities (clinics or hospitals). Medical care at clinics is often repetitive and medium to long term; thus, it is relatively easy to form a trusting relationship between patients and their doctor. Older people who do not seek life-saving care using advanced medical equipment may particularly want to be cared for by a doctor they trust whom they see regularly. In contrast, When patients often visit the hospital, it is due to a sudden illness. Since it is their intial meeting, it is difficult for them to establish a trusting relationship. In particular, if the patient is an older person with a difficult medical condition, he or she may not want to spend the rest of their life in a hospital but rather desire to see his or her family doctor and return to the clinic from the hospital.24) The results of our study also provide new evidence of the positive association between medical facilities or nursing offices that provide home nursing care and death at home. Another study from Japan also showed that the use of in-home services was associated with a higher probability of death at home.27) Clinically, it is assumed that care at home is necessary for peaceful end-of-life care, and our analysis confirmed this assumption. Currently, although most people in Japan want to spend a peaceful end-of-life at home, this goal is not often achieved. To fill this gap, more facilities providing home visiting care are needed.
The densities of hospitals, long-term care hospital beds, and long-term care facilities in the area were negatively associated with home death rates, with a large coefficient (95% CI) for hospitals of −3.93 (−7.45 to −0.40). The negative association between hospital density and death at home was reported previously, which is consistent with our finding.14) Although the causal interpretation of our result using fixed-effects models might be questioned, it is reasonable to consider this as a causal relationship to some extent, justified by the concept of “physician-induced demand,” in which a physician influences a patient’s demand for care against the physician’s interpretation of the best interests of the patient.28) Almost 90% of hospitals in Japan are private; thus, physicians and other healthcare workers in hospitals might motivate patients to use their services unnecessarily so that their hospitals will not go bankrupt. An excess of hospital beds will not only increase healthcare costs but also negatively affect people’s desire to die at home. In addition, Japan’s population is likely to continue declining; therefore, the density of beds per population will increase. Given this situation, the Japanese government should work more aggressively to reduce the density of beds or provide incentives to become home care providers.
The associations between healthcare resources and death at home differed with respect to the area-level income. We observed a negative association between death at home and hospital density in lower-income municipalities but not in high-income municipalities. Hence, it was more difficult for people in deprived areas to spend their end-of-life at home than people in affluent areas. This finding is consistent with those of studies from the United States16,22) and Japan.14) Thus, disparities also exist in health and death. The co-payment for end-of-life care at home is relatively high compared to that at hospitalization,29) although home care is covered by universal health insurance in Japan. The high cost of this co-payment likely influenced this choice. Our results emphasize the importance of addressing inequalities in access to home healthcare services.
While the present study has some significant findings, it has some limitations. First, a classification of “death at home” does not necessarily mean a comfortable peaceful death. It could include suicide, homicide, or unexpected sudden death such as myocardial infarction or stroke occurring at home. However, as the density of homicides and suicides was an order of magnitude lower than that of people accessing end-of-life care, this bias was unlikely to have significantly impacted our results. Second, this study examined only area-level factors. Future studies should consider both individual- and municipality-level factors. Third, our findings were based on observational data rather than data from randomized controlled trials. Thus, it was difficult to determine causal relationships. An abundance of local medical resources may allow many people to receive care at home; conversely, medical facilities supporting home care may exist in areas where many people receive care at home. Current research methods do not allow for a strict distinction between causes.
In conclusion, our analysis of comprehensive empirical data in Japan revealed a significant positive association between clinics supporting home medical care and death at home. Moreover, we found that the associations between healthcare resources and death at home differed with respect to area-level income. While most people in Japan want to spend their last days at home as much as possible, approximately only 10% achieve this goal. To close the regional gap in end-of-life care at home, the government should consider providing financial support for home healthcare in poor areas.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank Dr. Yoshimitsu Takahashi (Department of Health Informatics, Kyoto University School of Public Health, Kyoto), Dr. Hajime Yamazaki (Department of Healthcare Epidemiology, Kyoto University, Kyoto), Dr. Kemmyo Sugiyama (Tohoku University School of Dentistry), Dr. Yoko Ibuka (Faculty of Economics, Keio University, Tokyo), Dr. Kunio Tarasawa (Tohoku University School of Medicine) and Dr. Hatsuru Morita (Tohoku University School of Law) for their helpful discussion.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

CONFLICT OF INTEREST

The researchers claim no conflicts of interest.

FUNDING

This research is financially supported by the Open Research Areas (ORA) program by Japan Society of Promotion of Science (IN-CARE). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

AUTHOR CONTRIBUTION

Conceptualization, TT, TI; Data curation, TT, TI; Writing-original draft, TT, TI; Writing-review & editing, TT, TI.

Table 1.
Proportions of home deaths with respect to prefecture and year of investigation
Prefecture Number of municipalities 2014
2017
2017–2014
% of deaths at home
Number of older population % of deaths at home
Number of older population Change in % of deaths at home
Mean Median (25th–75th percentile) Mean Median (25th–75th percentile)
Hokkaido 179 6.6 6.9 (4.1–8.8) 1,460,774 7.1 6.6 (4.5–9.2) 1,587,834 0.5
Aomori 40 9.4 9.1 (7.5–11.0) 376,009 8.9 8.9 (5.8–11.0) 402,286 −0.5
Iwate 33 10.2 10.0 (7.7–12.5) 373,052 10.0 9.5 (8.5–11.6) 393,769 −0.2
Miyagi 35 12.4 12.5 (9.1–14.8) 550,541 12.7 13.2 (10.3–15.4) 601,931 0.3
Akita 25 9.1 9.3 (7.5–10.8) 333,095 9.3 9.6 (7.5–10.8) 350,886 0.2
Yamagata 35 10.8 10.4 (8.4–12.6) 330,796 10 9.5 (7.9–12.8) 349,220 −0.8
Fukushima 59 11.7 11.6 (7.6–15.3) 521,351 12.3 11.1 (7.4–13.8) 556,697 0.6
Ibaraki 44 11.2 10.8 (9.1–13.1) 728,635 11 10.3 (9.3–13.2) 797,397 −0.2
Tochigi 25 12.8 12.2 (10.8–13.4) 479,205 13.3 13.9 (11.3–15.3) 525,420 0.5
Gunma 35 9.9 9.5 (8.3–12.3) 511,233 9.7 10.0 (7.3–11.6) 552,960 −0.2
Saitama 63 11.2 11.4 (9.9–13.1) 1,650,437 12 12.1 (9.9–13.9) 1,831,494 0.8
Chiba 54 14.5 14.4 (12.2–16.3) 1,465,241 13.8 14.0 (11.5–15.8) 1,616,292 −0.7
Tokyo 62 16.2 16.1 (14.2–18.4) 2,826,614 20.8 17.8 (16.4–19.7) 3,023,613 4.6
Kanagawa 33 13.7 13.7 (11.6–15.3) 2,012,575 15.7 14.9 (14.0–17.0) 2,202,553 2.0
Niigata 30 12.3 10.7 (9.4–13.1) 653,715 10.1 10.2 (8.8–11.5) 696,626 −2.2
Toyama 15 9.2 8.6 (7.5–11.7) 308,335 11.0 11.3 (8.3–12.6) 327,725 1.8
Ishikawa 19 8.6 8.0 (7.0–10.0) 300,333 9.7 9.6 (8.2–11.3) 322,900 1.1
Fukui 17 12.8 12.0 (10.7–12.7) 210,775 11.6 10.8 (9.5–13.1) 225,869 −1.2
Yamanashi 27 12.7 12.0 (10.3–14.9) 225,500 11.7 12.4 (8.7–15.0) 240,505 −1.0
Nagano 77 14.2 13.3 (9.5–16.7) 601,557 14.1 12.7 (10.4–16.0) 636,771 −0.1
Gifu 42 13.5 12.4 (10.1–14.9) 541,917 12.3 12.0 (9.4–14.4) 581,664 −1.2
Shizuoka 35 13.4 12.5 (10.4–16.2) 969,600 13.8 13.4 (11.5–15.8) 1,048,332 0.4
Aichi 54 11.7 11.5 (9.9–13.0) 1,649,838 12.9 12.6 (10.8–14.3) 1,794,630 1.2
Mie 29 12.2 12.4 (10.1–13.5) 481,125 12.4 12.3 (9.5–15.4) 512,947 0.2
Shiga 19 14.4 15.2 (13.4–16.5) 316,461 13.8 13.6 (12.0–15.0) 347,257 −0.6
Kyoto 26 15.1 12.9 (10.9–15.3) 658,773 14.4 13.3 (12.9–15.9) 710,704 −0.7
Osaka 43 13.8 14.0 (12.0–15.6) 2,117,492 14.9 14.9 (12.8–16.6) 2,286,486 1.1
Hyogo 41 14.5 14.1 (11.9–17.1) 1,386,229 14.1 14.6 (11.9–16.1) 1,497,767 −0.4
Nara 39 17.2 15.6 (13.9–19.4) 368,182 15.9 16.7 (13.5–19.4) 399,774 −1.3
Wakayama 30 13 13.2 (11.1–16.8) 288,253 11.4 11.5 (10.2–14.2) 303,860 −1.6
Tottori 19 10.2 10.3 (8.0–13.3) 161,826 10.8 10.5 (8.1–13.0) 171,475 0.6
Shimane 19 10.9 9.9 (5.5–13.0) 216,174 11.6 10.0 (6.2–12.6) 226,600 0.7
Okayama 27 10.8 9.7 (8.7–12.1) 519,665 10.6 9.5 (7.5–11.9) 552,419 −0.2
Hiroshima 23 11.6 11.0 (9.8–13.0) 735,409 11.5 11.8 (10.2–12.3) 791,069 −0.1
Yamaguchi 19 10 10.1 (8.0–11.9) 428,348 10.2 10.2 (8.6–10.6) 455,557 0.2
Tokushima 24 10.5 10.2 (8.2–12.6) 222,731 9.7 9.4 (8.2–11.4) 237,095 −0.8
Kagawa 17 12.5 12.1 (9.7–15.1) 276,064 12.8 12.7 (10.0–15.0) 294,705 0.3
Ehime 20 12.2 12.2 (9.4–14.2) 405,751 12.3 12.2 (9.8–14.1) 432,021 0.1
Kochi 34 9.4 9.6 (6.6–12.7) 230,811 8.5 8.6 (6.5–10.7) 242,320 −0.9
Fukuoka 60 7.9 8.0 (6.9–9.2) 1,212,470 8.8 9.0 (7.3–10.1) 1,329,727 0.9
Saga 20 6.9 6.8 (4.4–8.0) 217,864 8.3 7.7 (5.3–10.5) 234,364 1.4
Nagasaki 21 8.6 8.5 (7.6–9.8) 390,147 8.9 8.5 (6.2–10.8) 417,651 0.3
Kumamoto 45 8.8 8.7 (7.1–11.0) 490,182 7.6 8.0 (5.7 –9.0) 522,792 −1.2
Oita 18 7.8 7.9 (6.6–8.9) 337,626 7.1 7.2 (5.5–8.1) 360,437 −0.7
Miyazaki 26 8.6 8.1 (7.0–10.3) 311,487 7.4 7.9 (5.8–8.4) 333,985 −1.2
Kagoshima 43 8.7 8.0 (6.4–9.8) 467,910 10.2 9.0 (6.6–11.4) 494,555 1.5
Okinawa 41 12.3 11.8 (8.6–14.9) 260,308 12.6 11.6 (8.8–14.0) 293,448 0.3
Table 2.
Changes in area-level factors between 2014 and 2017
Non-standardized values
Standardized valuesa)
2014 2017 Δ2017–2014 2014 2017 Δ2017–2014
Density of hospitals 4.88±12.12 4.83±11.99 –0.05 0.25±0.23 0.23±0.21 –0.02
Density of clinics 57.70±169.53 58.28±172.58 0.58 2.65±2.26 2.50±2.22 –0.15
Density of home care support hospitals 0.53±1.72 0.69±2.13 0.15 0.03±0.08 0.03±0.08 0.00
Density of home care support clinics 8.27±28.66 8.42±29.20 0.15 0.34±0.37 0.33±0.41 –0.01
Density of hospitals providing home visit medical care 1.55±3.52 1.55±3.54 0.01 0.10±0.16 0.10±0.15 –0.01
Density of clinics providing home visit medical care 11.83±34.28 11.58±34.22 –0.25 0.60±0.53 0.56±0.63 –0.04
Density of hospitals/clinics/nursing stations providing home-visit nursing and guidance 1.65±6.93 1.88±8.99 0.23 0.43±0.41 0.43±0.59 0.00
Density of long-term care hospital beds 38.44±121.20 30.64±104.14 –7.80 2.02±5.78 1.54±5.11 –0.48
Density of long-term healthcare facility beds 208.03±478.91 214.06±494.53 6.03 12.55±13.99 12.02±13.52 –0.54
Density of rooms of special nursing homes for older adults 286.23±631.80 311.60±701.29 25.37 21.54±17.74 21.71±17.74 0.16
Density of small-scale multifunction type home care offices 2.66±7.10 3.07±8.21 0.41 0.15±0.27 0.16±0.28 0.01
Density of composite service offices 0.09±0.55 0.22±0.95 0.13 0.00±0.01 0.01±0.02 0.00
Municipality-level income (Japanese yen)b) 2,778.35±552.82 2,855.87±554.71 77.52 - - -

Values are presented as mean±standard deviation.

a) All healthcare resources other than municipality-level income were standardized by the number of the older population in each municipality per 1,000 municipality-level population.

b) 100 yen roughly equals one US dollar.

Table 3.
Area-level factors for deaths at home (multivariate fixed-effects regression analysis)
Model 1
Model 2
Coefficient 95% CI Coefficient 95% CI
Area-level factors for deaths at home
 Density of hospitals –3.93 –7.45 to –0.40 –7.30 –13.17 to –1.44
 Density of clinics –1.31 –2.89 to 0.28 –0.76 –2.38 to 0.85
 Density of home care support hospitals 0.50 –3.63 to 4.63 1.01 –2.79 to 4.82
 Density of home care support clinics 0.99 –0.41 to 2.40 0.63 –0.41 to 1.68
 Density of hospitals providing home visit medical care 1.76 –0.85 to 4.37 1.81 –0.78 to 4.40
 Density of clinics providing home visit medical care 2.14 1.12 to 3.15 1.11 0.17 to 2.06
 Density of hospitals/clinics/nursing stations providing home-visit nursing and guidance 2.19 0.99 to 3.39 3.99 2.84 to 5.15
 Density of long-term care hospital beds –0.16 –0.24 to –0.08 –0.21 –0.30 to –0.12
 Density of long-term healthcare facility beds –0.10 –0.19 to –0.01 –0.09 –0.21 to 0.04
 Density of rooms of special nursing homes for older adults 0.03 –0.01 to 0.08 0.03 –0.01 to 0.08
 Density of small-scale multifunction type home care offices –2.95 –4.76 to –1.14 –0.45 –3.01 to 2.11
 Density of composite service offices 0.18 –13.15 to 13.50 0.54 –12.82 to 13.90
 Municipality-level income (continuous) 0.000 –0.002 to 0.001 –0.001 –0.002 to 0.001
Interaction terms of municipality-level income in 2014 (ref. high-level income)
 Density of hospitals - - 4.36 –2.04 to 10.76
 Density of clinics providing home visit medical care - - –0.12 –1.80 to 1.55
 Density of hospitals/clinics/nursing stations providing home-visit nursing and guidance - - –4.56 –6.15 to –2.97
 Density of long-term care hospital beds - - 0.23 0.08 to 0.38
 Density of long-term healthcare facility beds - - –0.02 –0.19 to 0.15
 Density of small-scale multifunction type home care offices - - –3.69 –6.71 to –0.67

All healthcare resources other than municipality-level income were standardized by the number of the older population in each municipality per 1,000 municipality-level population.

Model 2 is additionally included interaction terms that were significantly associated in Model 1.

CI, confidence interval.

Statistically significant associations (p<0.05) are indicated in bold type.

Table 4.
Area-level factors for deaths at home with respect to income level in 2014 (multivariate fixed-effects regression analysis)
Higher-income municipalities (n=870)
Lower-income municipalities (n=871)
Coefficient 95% CI Coef. 95% CI
Density of hospitals –5.83 –14.26 to 2.60 –3.77 –7.21 to –0.34
Density of clinics –0.95 –3.68 to 1.79 –0.50 –2.04 to 1.05
Density of home care support hospitals –0.22 –4.18 to 3.73 1.50 –3.05 to 6.06
Density of home care support clinics 1.80 0.85 to 2.76 –0.43 –1.79 to 0.93
Density of hospitals providing home visit medical care 1.31 –3.90 to 6.51 2.10 –0.72 to 4.92
Density of clinics providing home visit medical care 1.58 0.51 to 2.65 0.96 –0.47 to 2.39
Density of hospitals/clinics/nursing stations providing home-visit nursing and guidance 3.60 2.23 to 4.97 –0.54 –1.64 to 0.56
Density of long-term care hospital beds –0.21 –0.30 to –0.11 0.00 –0.12 to 0.12
Density of long-term healthcare facility beds –0.09 –0.21 to 0.02 –0.14 –0.26 to –0.02
Density of rooms of special nursing homes for older adults 0.04 –0.05 to 0.13 0.03 –0.03 to 0.08
Density of small-scale multifunction type home care offices –0.92 –3.67 to 1.83 –4.07 –5.88 to –2.27
Density of composite service offices 5.57 –13.78 to 24.92 –5.47 –17.06 to 6.13
Municipality-level income 0.00 –0.001 to 0.002 –0.002 –0.004 to 0.0002

All healthcare resources other than municipality-level income were standardized by the number of older population in each municipality per 1,000 municipality-level population.

CI, confidence interval.

Statistically significant associations (p<0.05) are indicated in bold type.

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