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A longitudinal cohort study evaluating the impact of a geriatrician-led residential care out-reach service on acute health care utilisation.

journal contribution
posted on 2014-12-23, 00:00 authored by Ana HutchinsonAna Hutchinson, S Parikh, M Tacey, P Harvey, W K Lim
Background: Over the last decade, high demand for acute health care services by long-term residents of residential care facilities (RCF) has stimulated interest in exploring alternative models of care. The Residential Care Intervention Program in the Elderly (RECIPE) service provides expert outreach services to RCFs residents, interventions include: comprehensive care planning, management of intercurrent illness and rapid access to acute care substitution services.
Objective: To evaluate whether the RECIPE service decreased acute health care utilisation.
Design: A retrospective cohort study using interrupted time series analysis to analyse change in acute healthcare utilisation before and after enrolment.
Setting: A 300 bed metropolitan teaching hospital in Australia and 73 RCF within its catchment.
Subjects: There were 1327 patients enrolled in the service with a median age 84 years, 61% were female.
Methods: Data was collected prospectively on all enrolled patients from 2004 to 2011 and linked to the acute health service administrative dataset. Primary outcomes change in admission rates, length of stay and beddays per quarter.
Results: In the two years prior to enrolment the mean number of acute care admissions per patient per year was 3.03 (SD 2.9) versus post 2.4 (SD 3.3), the service reducing admissions by 0.13 admissions per patient per quarter (p=0.046). Prior to enrolment the mean length of stay was 8.6 (SD 11.0) versus post 3.5 (SD 5.0), a reduction of 1.5 days per patient per quarter (p=0.003).
Conclusions:
This study suggests that an outreach service comprising a geriatrician-led multidisciplinary team can reduce acute hospital utilisation rates.

History

Journal

Age and Ageing

Volume

44

Issue

2

Pagination

1 - 6

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Location

Oxford, United Kingdom

ISSN

1468-2834

Language

English

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2014, Oxford University Press