Factors impacting loneliness in patients with serious life-limiting illness in the Emergency Medicine Palliative Care Access (EMPallA) study Journal Article


Authors: Maloney, B.; Flannery, M.; Bischof, J. J.; Van Allen, K.; Adeyemi, O.; Goldfeld, K. S.; Cuthel, A. M.; Chang, A.; Grudzen, C. R.
Article Title: Factors impacting loneliness in patients with serious life-limiting illness in the Emergency Medicine Palliative Care Access (EMPallA) study
Abstract: Background: Loneliness is a quality-of-life (QoL) concern for patients facing serious, life-limiting illnesses. Discerning risk factors of loneliness in palliative care patients allows providers to take preventative action and develop holistic treatment plans. Methods: A planned sub-study of patients who completed the previously developed Three-Item Loneliness Scale upon enrollment into the multicenter, randomized clinical trial Emergency Medicine Palliative Care Access (EMPallA) with the objective of investigating the association of multimorbidity with loneliness in patients with late-stage illnesses. The EMPallA study included patients who were at least 50 years old and diagnosed with at least one end-stage illness (advanced cancer, advanced congestive heart failure (CHF), end-stage renal disease (ESRD), or advanced chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)). Results: We analyzed 1,212 surveys using a mixed-effects logistic regression model. Our findings suggest those with a single illness are less likely to be lonely than those with multimorbidity (odds ratio [OR] = 0.5, 95% CI 0.3 to 0.8). Additionally, older age was associated with less loneliness (OR comparing age by 10-year increments is 0.7 [95% CI: 0.6 to 0.9]), after adjusting for disease type, education level, race, sex, immigrant status, having a caregiver, COVID-19 period, language, and site geographic location. Conclusions: Patients suffering from multimorbidity self-report being “very lonely” more often than patients with a single advanced illness; furthermore, advanced illness patients who were middle-aged (versus elderly) were 25% more likely to report being “very lonely.” Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT03325985. Registered October 30, 2017. © The Author(s) 2025.
Keywords: aged; aged, 80 and over; middle aged; clinical trial; advanced cancer; palliative care; quality of life; logistic models; palliative therapy; risk factors; psychology; risk factor; questionnaire; multicenter study; patient-reported outcomes; statistical model; therapy; loneliness; chronic obstructive lung disease; pulmonary disease, chronic obstructive; geriatrics; emergency medicine; procedures; functional decline; very elderly; humans; human; male; female; surveys and questionnaires; end-stage organ failure
Journal Title: BMC Palliative Care
Volume: 24
ISSN: 1472-684X
Publisher: Biomed Central Ltd  
Date Published: 2025-03-08
Start Page: 58
Language: English
DOI: 10.1186/s12904-025-01699-1
PUBMED: 40055670
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC11889821
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Corita Reilley Grudzen
    31 Grudzen