Literature DB >> 19175441

A practice-based intervention to improve primary care for falls, urinary incontinence, and dementia.

Neil S Wenger1, Carol P Roth, Paul G Shekelle, Roy T Young, David H Solomon, Caren J Kamberg, John T Chang, Rachel Louie, Takahiro Higashi, Catherine H MacLean, John Adams, Lillian C Min, Kurt Ransohoff, Marc Hoffing, David B Reuben.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To determine whether a practice-based intervention can improve care for falls, urinary incontinence, and cognitive impairment.
DESIGN: Controlled trial.
SETTING: Two community medical groups. PARTICIPANTS: Community-dwelling patients (357 at intervention sites and 287 at control sites) aged 75 and older identified as having difficulty with falls, incontinence, or cognitive impairment. INTERVENTION: Intervention and control practices received condition case-finding, but only intervention practices received a multicomponent practice-change intervention. MEASUREMENTS: Percentage of quality indicators satisfied measured using a 13-month medical record abstraction.
RESULTS: Before the intervention, the quality of care was the same in intervention and control groups. Screening tripled the number of patients identified as needing care for falls, incontinence, or cognitive impairment. During the intervention, overall care for the three conditions was better in the intervention than the control group (41%, 95% confidence interval (CI)=35-46% vs 25%, 95% CI=20-30%, P<.001). Intervention group patients received better care for falls (44% vs 23%, P<.001) and incontinence (37% vs 22%, P<.001) but not for cognitive impairment (44% vs 41%, P=.67) than control group patients. The intervention was more effective for conditions identified by screening than for conditions identified through usual care.
CONCLUSION: A practice-based intervention integrated into usual clinical care can improve primary care for falls and urinary incontinence, although even with the intervention, less than half of the recommended care for these conditions was provided. More-intensive interventions, such as embedding intervention components into an electronic medical record, will be needed to adequately improve care for falls and incontinence.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19175441     DOI: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2008.02128.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Geriatr Soc        ISSN: 0002-8614            Impact factor:   5.562


  37 in total

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4.  Documentation of advance care planning for community-dwelling elders.

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Authors:  Brian J Lichtenstein; David B Reuben; Arun S Karlamangla; Weijuan Han; Carol P Roth; Neil S Wenger
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9.  A view from the USA on the Alzheimer's disease international position paper.

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10.  When comorbidity, aging, and complexity of primary care meet: development and validation of the Geriatric CompleXity of Care Index.

Authors:  Lillian Min; Neil Wenger; Anne M Walling; Caroline Blaum; Christine Cigolle; David A Ganz; David Reuben; Paul Shekelle; Carol Roth; Eve A Kerr
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