Palliative and end of life care factsheet: Patterns of care, England 2024

Background

In society every person should receive high-quality, compassionate care from diagnosis through to the end of life.

The 10 Year Health Plan for England aims to shift more care from hospital to community. The palliative and end of life care sector will continue to be at the heart of delivering this shift. This will help ensure that patients and their families receive personalised care in the most appropriate setting.

The purpose of this factsheet is to describe patterns of care near the end of life related to 4 major conditions. It includes experimental statistics describing the number of deaths, the number of hospital admissions in the months before death and the place of death.

The major condition groups are here defined broadly to capture the impact of these conditions on people at the end of their life and include both chronic and acute conditions. A brief description of how underlying cause of death is determined from the death certificate is included in the Supporting information section together with the definition of how the underlying and contributory causes of death were used to identify people living with major conditions. In this factsheet

  • respiratory disease includes chronic conditions such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and acute conditions for example pneumonia. It does not include COVID-19

  • cardiovascular disease includes chronic conditions such as heart failure and acute conditions for example myocardial infarction (“heart attack”). It does not include diabetes or renal failure

  • dementia includes both dementia and Alzheimer’s disease

A person is described as dying “of” a condition if it is the underlying cause of death recorded on the death certificate, and dying “with” a condition if it is a contributory cause of death only.

More data is available in the accompanying spreadsheet which includes more detailed information by specific underlying causes of death within the major conditions, age, sex, socio-economic deprivation and ethnicity.

Main findings

  • the overwhelming majority (88.1%, 466,947) of people who died in 2024, died of or with one of the 4 major conditions

  • 68.8% (364,813) of all people who died in 2024, spent time in hospital during the 6 months before they died, staying for a total of 8.4 million days in hospital

  • 69.9% (277,085) of people who died in 2024 of one of the 4 major conditions, spent time in hospital during the 6 months before they died, staying for a total of 6.2 million days in hospital

  • 47.0% of the inpatient care provided by hospitals (measured in terms of days in hospital) for people aged 85 year or older is for people in their last year of life

  • 60.7% of all people who died had a least one emergency admission in their last 3 months of life, 6.6% having three or more emergency admissions in their last 3 months of life

  • among the major conditions, the likelihood of having an emergency admission in the 3 months prior to their death is greater for people who died of cancer (70.3%) or respiratory disease (72.0%) than for people who died of cardiovascular disease (54.1%) or dementia (40.9%)

  • the condition(s) people are living with in their final weeks can affect where they are cared for and where they ultimately die; comparing the 4 major conditions with each other

    • people who died of cancer were the most likely to die at home (34.8% compared to 28.1% of all deaths) or in a hospice (16.5% compared to 5.5% of all deaths)

    • people who died of dementia were the most likely to die in a care home (64.1% compared to 21.5% of all deaths)

    • people who died of respiratory disease were most likely to die in hospital (62.0% compared to 42.3% or all deaths)

Characteristics of those who died

In 2024

  • 530,177 people died (excluding neonatal deaths)

  • 74.8% (396,468 people) died of one the 4 major conditions

  • the overwhelming majority (88.1%, 466,947) of people died of or with at least one of the 4 major conditions

Table 1 and Figure 1 show that in their final months before death, many more people are living with cardiovascular disease, dementia and respiratory disease than would be suggested by underlying cause of death alone. For example, about 2 times more people who died with than died of respiratory disease.

Counting people by underlying cause of death will underestimate the number of people living with these conditions near the end of their life. A better estimate uses both the underlying cause of death and the contributory causes of death. However, this is still an underestimate of people living with these conditions prior to death as it only counts people for whom the doctor recorded these conditions as contributing to the death.

The underlying and contributory causes of death for any individual may encompass several of the major conditions. Consequently, while any one person will only be counted in a single underlying cause of death group, a person may be counted in up to 4 contributory cause of death groups. Due to this double counting, it would be wrong to add together counts that include people by their contributory causes of death.


Table 1: Number and percentage of people who died of or with 4 major conditions, England 2024

Deaths with the condition as Cancer Cardiovascular Dementia Respiratory Any of the four conditions
Underlying cause of death 139,795 126,250 66,191 64,232 396,468
Only a contributory cause of death 18,000 117,759 27,276 105,181 70,479
Underlying or contributory cause of death (total) 157,795 244,009 93,467 169,413 466,947
Deaths with the condition as Cancer Cardiovascular Dementia Respiratory Any of the four conditions
Underlying cause of death 26.4% 23.8% 12.5% 12.1% 74.8%
Only a contributory cause of death 3.4% 22.2% 5.1% 19.8% 13.3%
Underlying or contributory cause of death (total) 29.8% 46.0% 17.6% 32.0% 88.1%

Figure 1: Number of people who died of or with 4 major conditions, England 2024

The deaths in each major condition group vary by demographic characteristics. For example;

  • people who died of cancer are on average the youngest, 42% of people who died of cancer were under 75 years compared to 31% of all deaths

  • among people who died of dementia, 63% were female and 37% male compared to 49% female and 51% male for all deaths. They are also the most elderly with 67% aged 85 years or older compared 40% of all deaths

Table 2 and Figure 2 show the 4 major conditions are the underlying or contributory cause of death for the overwhelming majority of deaths (at least 80%) in each of the categories within sex, age, ethnicity and socio-economic deprivation.


Figure 2: Percentage of people who died of or with 4 major conditions by demographic group, England 2024

Table 2: Number and percentage of people who died of or with 4 major conditions by demographic group, England 2024

Under 75 75 to 85 85 or older
Distribution of all deaths by age group
Number of deaths (any cause) 162,320 157,243 210,614
Percentage of all deaths 30.6% 29.7% 39.7%


People who died of one of the 4 major conditions (underlying cause of death)
Number of deaths 114,643 125,260 156,565
Percentage of all deaths in this age group 70.6% 79.7% 74.3%

People who died of or with one of the 4 major conditions (underlying or contributory cause of death)
Number of deaths 137,596 147,034 182,317
Percentage of all deaths in this age group 84.8% 93.5% 86.6%
Female Male
Distribution of all deaths by sex
Number of deaths (any cause) 260,315 269,862
Percentage of all deaths 49.1% 50.9%


People who died of one of the 4 major conditions (underlying cause of death)
Number of deaths 194,695 201,773
Percentage of all deaths in this sex 74.8% 74.8%

People who died of or with one of the 4 major conditions (underlying or contributory cause of death)
Number of deaths 227,089 239,858
Percentage of all deaths in this sex 87.2% 88.9%
Asian or Asian British Black or Black British Mixed White Other ethnic group Not known
Distribution of all deaths by ethnic group
Number of deaths (any cause) 17,418 9,021 2,423 474,455 1,752 25,108
Percentage of all deaths 3.3% 1.7% 0.5% 89.5% 0.3% 4.7%


People who died of one of the 4 major conditions (underlying cause of death)
Number of deaths 12,279 6,489 1,598 355,153 1,238 19,711
Percentage of all deaths in this ethnic group 70.5% 71.9% 66.0% 74.9% 70.7% 78.5%

People who died of or with one of the 4 major conditions (underlying or contributory cause of death)
Number of deaths 15,186 7,811 1,942 417,972 1,446 22,590
Percentage of all deaths in this ethnic group 87.2% 86.6% 80.1% 88.1% 82.5% 90.0%
1 Most deprived 2 3 4 5 Least deprived
Distribution of all deaths by deprivation quintile
Number of deaths (any cause) 107,312 103,278 108,462 108,686 102,439
Percentage of all deaths 20.2% 19.5% 20.5% 20.5% 19.3%


People who died of one of the 4 major conditions (underlying cause of death)
Number of deaths 78,890 76,721 81,357 82,010 77,490
Percentage of all deaths in this deprivation quintile 73.5% 74.3% 75.0% 75.5% 75.6%

People who died of or with one of the 4 major conditions (underlying or contributory cause of death)
Number of deaths 93,995 90,861 95,719 96,001 90,371
Percentage of all deaths in this deprivation quintile 87.6% 88.0% 88.3% 88.3% 88.2%

Time spent in hospital

Among the people who died in 2024

  • a total of 364,813 people were seen in hospital as an inpatient during the 6 months before they died (68.8% of all deaths), staying a total of 8.4 million days in hospital

  • within the last 6 months of life, the majority of the time in hospital is during the final 3 months (6.3 million days in the last 3 months out of 8.4 million days in the last 6 months). Table 3 shows this is similar for each of the major conditions

  • nearly 15,000 of the people seen in hospital as an inpatient during their final 6 months were admitted as a day case only. A day case is admitted and discharged on the same day, and is reported here with a length of stay of zero days

Figure 3 shows the variation in the total time spent in hospital for inpatients during their final 6 months of life. This will, for some people, be a total time over multiple admissions. The distribution is highly skewed with and for most people their length of stay is not close to the average length of stay.The figure also shows

  • although the median days in hospital is 15 days, the most common time in hospital is 1 day

  • half of the 364,813 (182,407) people who were seen in hospital as an inpatient during their final 6 months stayed in hospital between 6 and 32 days in total. Table 3 shows that this range is similar for each of the major conditions

  • caring for people near the end of their life is a significant proportion of the care provided by hospitals. On average people spend 8.7% of their last six months of life in hospital, and 99,478 people (19% of all people who died) spent 30 days or more in hospital during their last 6 months

  • Table 3 shows that being seen in hospital as an inpatient during their last 6 months of life was more likely for people who died of cancer or respiratory disease, compared to people who died of cardiovascular disease or dementia


Figure 3: Variation in the time spent in hospital during the last 6 months of life, England 2024

This graphic includes data for 364,813 people who were seen in hospital as an inpatient at any time during their final 6 months. It excludes 165,364 people who were never an inpatient during their last 6 months of life. Among those seen in hospital, nearly 15,000 were only seen in admissions with no overnight stay (zero days).

Table 3: Time spent in hospital in the months before death for people who died of 4 major conditions, England 2024

Measure Cancer Cardiovascular Dementia Other Respiratory All deaths
People with at least 1 hospital admission 114,281 78,715 33,888 87,728 50,201 364,813
People admitted as a percentage of all deaths 81.7% 62.3% 51.2% 65.6% 78.2% 68.8%
Total days in hospital (millions) 2.5 1.8 0.8 2.2 1.2 8.4
Range of time in hospital for people with at least 1 admission
Median 16 13 15 16 15 15
Range for middle 50% (interquartile range) 7 to 29 4 to 31 6 to 31 6 to 35 6 to 32 6 to 32
Measure Cancer Cardiovascular Dementia Other Respiratory All deaths
People with at least 1 hospital admission 104,463 72,066 28,748 81,952 47,464 334,693
People admitted as a percentage of all deaths 74.7% 57.1% 43.4% 61.3% 73.9% 63.1%
Total days in hospital (millions) 1.9 1.3 0.5 1.7 0.9 6.3
Range of time in hospital for people with at least 1 admission
Median 14 11 13 14 13 13
Range for middle 50% (interquartile range) 6 to 25 4 to 26 5 to 27 5 to 29 5 to 26 5 to 26

The 25th percentile is the value at which 25% of the data lie below that value. The median is the value at which 50% of the data lie below that value. The 75th percentile is the value at which 75% of the data lie below that value. The interquartile range is between the 25th percentile and the 75th percentile.

Emergency hospital admissions

In the 12 months August 2023 to July 2024

  • there were 6.5 million emergency hospital admissions, 14.0% of which involved people in their last year of life

  • a total of 33.1 million days in hospital followed an emergency admission, of these 30.0% involved people in their last year of life

Table 4 shows that;

  • of all admissions, the percentage that involve people in the last year of life is highest among the oldest age group (85 years and older 39.0%) and lowest in the youngest age group (under 75 years 7.0%)

  • of all days in hospital, the percentage that involve people in the last year of life is highest among the oldest age group (85 years and older 47.0%), and lowest in the youngest age group (under 75 years 18.0%)

Table 4: Emergency admissions and time spent in hospital following emergency admission by age, England for the 12 months August 2023 to July 2024

Under 75 years 75 to 84 years 85 years or older All ages
Number of admissions (millions) 4.6 1.1 0.8 6.5
Admissions involving people in the last year of life (millions) 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.9
Percentage of all admissions that involve people in the last year of life 7.0% 25.0% 39.0% 14.0%
Under 75 years 75 to 84 years 85 years or older All ages
Total days in hospital (millions) 16.4 8.9 7.8 33.1
Days in hospital involving people in the last year of life (millions) 2.9 3.2 3.7 9.8
Percentage of all days in hospital that involve people in the last year of life 18.0% 36.0% 47.0% 30.0%

Emergency hospital admissions in the final 3 months of life

During the final three months of life for people who died in 2024

  • a large majority of hospital admissions were emergency admissions, 77.0% of a total of approximately 633,000 hospital admissions

  • nearly two thirds of people (60.7%) had a least one emergency admission

  • 6.6% of people had three or more emergency admissions

Figure 4 and Table 5 show that of the 4 major conditions, people who died of cancer or respiratory disease were more likely to have had an emergency admission in the 3 months prior to their death than people who died of cardiovascular disease or dementia.

Figure 4: Percentage of people who have emergency hospital admissions during the final 3 months of life for people who died of 4 major conditions, England 2024

Table 5: Emergency hospital admissions during the final 3 months of life for people who died of 4 major conditions, England 2024

Cancer Cardiovascular Dementia Respiratory All deaths
Number of emergency hospital admissions 161,488 96,574 36,684 71,101 485,095
Proportion of people with at least 1 emergency hospital admission 70.3% 54.1% 40.9% 72.0% 60.7%
Proportion of people with 3 or more emergency hospital admissions 10.4% 4.5% 2.5% 8.6% 6.6%

Place of death

The condition(s) people live with as they approach the end of their life can affect where they are cared for and where they ultimately die. Table 6 presents data on where people died by the major condition they died of. It includes both the number of deaths and percentage of deaths that occur in each setting, it shows

  • hospital is the most common place of death (42.3% of all deaths)

  • nearly half of people die in the community, either at home (28.1%) or in a care home (21.5%)

  • relatively few people die in a hospice (5.5%) or other places (2.6%) (for example public places or someone else’s home)

  • people who died of cancer were the most likely to die at home (34.8% compared to 28.1% of all deaths) or in a hospice (16.5% compared to 5.5% of all deaths)

  • people who died of dementia were the most likely to die in a care home (64.1% compared to 21.5% of all deaths)

  • people who died of respiratory disease were most likely to die in hospital (62.0% compared to 42.3% of all deaths)

  • a large majority (79%) of the 29,096 people who died in hospice, died of cancer

Place of death varies by specific underlying cause of death within the major condition groups, Figure 5 shows for example,

  • within cardiovascular disease, 61.8% of people who died of stroke occur in hospital, compared to 36.8% of people who died of coronary heart disease. 48.5% of deaths from coronary heart disease occur at home compared to 13.6% of people who died of stroke

  • within respiratory disease, 56.0% of deaths from COPD occur in hospital, compared to 74.1% of deaths from pneumonia

Table 6: Place of death for people who died of 4 major conditions, England 2024

Place of death Cancer Cardiovascular Dementia Respiratory All deaths
Care home 19,008 18,992 42,456 8,219 113,847
Home 48,714 44,647 10,268 14,516 149,174
Hospice 22,997 1,750 477 1,001 29,096
Hospital 46,644 56,788 12,400 39,806 224,029
Other places 2,432 4,073 590 690 14,031
Place of death Cancer Cardiovascular Dementia Respiratory All deaths
Care home 13.6% 15.0% 64.1% 12.8% 21.5%
Home 34.8% 35.4% 15.5% 22.6% 28.1%
Hospice 16.5% 1.4% 0.7% 1.6% 5.5%
Hospital 33.4% 45.0% 18.7% 62.0% 42.3%
Other places 1.7% 3.2% 0.9% 1.1% 2.6%

Figure 5: Place of death for people who died of 4 major conditions, England 2024

Local considerations and additional resources

Commissioners and service providers should review the data presented in this factsheet alongside several other data and intelligence tools and reports. They should also consider using locally produced data on specialist palliative care and social care services. We have provided information on the main supporting resources in this section.

Local indicators on hospital use at the end of life can be found on the Palliative and End of Life Care Profiles. These include indicators on 3 or more emergency admissions in the last 90 days of life. These profiles also include indicators describing the percentage of people who died in hospital or home by different age groups in the place of death topic section. The data for all these indicators are shown for multiple geographies.

The Place of Death Factsheet provides the data on trends in place of death at ICB level. Number and percentage of deaths in hospitals, at home, in care homes, in hospices (not community) and ‘other places’ are presented.

The Care Homes Factsheet describes data on the current provision and future need for end of life care in care homes. They also provide contextual data on care home beds, staff capacity, and training of care home staff.

Additional data on major health conditions are available from the DHSC public health profiles

Information and resources for health and social care professionals can be found on the National End of Life Care Intelligence Network’s Palliative and End of Life Care Resources and Publications page. This includes a comprehensive catalogue of condition and setting specific data, intelligence tools, policy and guidance.

Resources supporting this factsheet

Data used to produce this factsheet is available as a spreadsheet

Contact us

For any queries please email

Supporting information

Underlying and contributory causes of death

The selection of the underlying cause of death is based on International Classification of Diseases (ICD) rules and is made from the condition or conditions reported by the certifier, as recorded on the death certificate. The underlying cause of death is defined by the World Health Organistation as the disease or injury that initiated the sequence of events directly leading to death or the circumstances of the accident or violence that produced the fatal injury. More details can be found in the Office for National Statistics User guide to mortality statistics.

Data sources

Annual mortality extracts, Office for National Statistics (ONS) © Crown copyright 2025, Re-used with permission of ONS. All rights reserved. Further information available from ONS.
Linked HES - ONS Mortality extract, Office for National Statistics © Crown copyright 2025, NHS Digital © Copyright 2025, Re-used with permission of NHS Digital. All rights reserved. Further information available from NHS Digital.
Hospital Episode Statistics (HES), NHS Digital © Copyright 2025, Re-used with permission of NHS Digital. All rights reserved. Further information available from NHS Digital.

Methodology

Note Title Content
1 Cohort definition (all but the Emergency hospital admissions section) The cohort was defined from mortality data. The only exception being the ethnicity which came from a combination of the HES linked mortality data and HES. Hospital activity was extracted for the identified deaths. Deaths are included if
  • the death was registered in 2024
  • the recorded home address is in England.Neonatal deaths are excluded. Deaths were excluded from the HES linked mortality data where the data indicated the existence of hospital activity for the person after the date of death.
2 Cohort definition for Emergency hospital admissions section This section included all admissions for residents of England (LSOA11 starts “E”) with an admission date in the 12 months August 2023 to July 2024 whether or not the individual died. Emergency admissions were identitified as ADMIMETH starts “2”.
3 HES linked mortality data The HES Linked mortality was deduplicated using the encrypted NHS Number. The HES Linked mortality data only includes people linked to hospital activity recorded in HES. Deaths with no recorded cause of death were excluded. The difference between the reference ONS deaths and the deduplicated HES Linked mortality data was assumed to be people with no hospital activity.
4 Hospital Episode Statistics Regular day and night attendances and maternity events were excluded. Hospital admissions (“spells”) were counted after grouping the recorded episodes. The episodes within a spell shared common values of person identifier (TOKEN_PERSON_ID), admission date, provider code (PROCODE3), and provider spell number (PROVSPNOPS). Spells with a discharge date more than 1 day after date of death were excluded. The length of a spell in days is the difference between the discharge date and the admission date. Any spells that started and finished on the same day contribute zero days to calculations of time in hospital.
5 Time spent in hospital in the final 6 and 3 months of life This analysis took as a model the end of life care measure Quality Outcome Measure 10: The percentage of last 6 months of life spent at home or in a community setting published in Scotland. For this part of the analysis only, in common with the Scottish measure, deaths from falls and external causes (V00-V99, W20-W99, X00-X99, Y00-Y84) were excluded. Only ordinary admissions were included; regular day and night attendances and maternity events were excluded. When a spell started earlier than 6 (or 3) months before death and finished during the 6 months before death, only the days within the final 6 (or 3) months contributed to this analysis. 3 months was coded as 90 days, 6 months as 182 days.
6 Emergency hospital admissions in the final 3 months of life Identified in the HES data as ADMIMETH starting “2”. 3 months was coded as 90 days.
7 Cause of death Categories were determined from the recorded ICD10 codes for underyling cause of death and up to 15 contributory causes of death.

Broad
  • Cancer C00 – C99
  • Cardiovascular disease I00 – I99
  • Dementia F00, F01, F03, G30, G318, G310
  • Respiratory disease J00 – J99

Narrow
  • Bowel cancer: C18 to C20  
  • Breast cancer: C50 
  • Lung cancer: C33, C34 
  • Prostate cancer: C61 
  • Coronary heart disease: I20 to I25 
  • Heart failure: I50 
  • Stroke: I60 to I69 
  • Pneumonia: J12 to J18 
  • Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: J40 to J44 
8 Place of death Place of death is recorded in the mortality data. For further information on the methods used for all place of death indicators as classified by ONS death certificate data, described in National End of Life Care Intelligence Network publication: Classification of Place of Death: A technical bulletin.
9 Ethnicity Ethnicity is not recorded in mortality records. The ethnic group reported was derived from patient data recorded in HES, associated with a death record through the Linked HES_ONS mortality data. The methodology is described in the Method for assigning ethnic group in the COVID-19 Health Inequalities Monitoring for England (CHIME) tool. In this analysis a pseudonymised data view was used and no linkage was undertaken using patient identifiable data. Deaths imputed to be missing from the Linked HES_ONS mortality data were assigned “unknown” ethnicity.
10 Socio-economic deprivation The category for each person was determined by the Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD) rank for the local area (Local Super Output Area LSOA) that includes the person’s postcode. LSOA are grouped into 5 quintiles of equal numbers of LSOAs, where quintile 1 includes areas with the highest IMD score, and quintile 5 the lowest. Further details on IMD are available from the Government website.

Version history

Version Date Summary of changes
1 1 August 2023
  • First publication focussed on 2021
2 18 August 2023
  • Correction: Fixed broken URL to the factsheet data spreadsheet
  • Addition of a link to the Major Conditions interim report
3 6 February 2024
  • Refreshed with focus on 2022
  • Refine Time in hospital analysis to include “Ordinary admissions” only (CLASSPAT=1)
  • Correction: Emergency admission in last year of life analysis; people under 1 year of age had been misclassified as 85 years or older
4 4 March 2025
  • Refreshed with focus on 2023
  • Correction: The number of people never admitted was corrected to take account of exclusions to the people who spent time in hospital
5 8 January 2026
  • Refreshed with focus on 2024