| Literature DB >> 23150906 |
Inger Johansen1, Morten Lindbak, Johan K Stanghelle, Mette Brekke.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The optimal setting and content of primary health care rehabilitation of older people is not known. Our aim was to study independence, institutionalization, death and treatment costs 18 months after primary care rehabilitation of older people in two different settings.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23150906 PMCID: PMC3507889 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-12-400
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Main characteristics of Primary Care Dedicated Inpatient Rehabilitation and Primary Care Nursing Home Rehabilitation
| Multi-dimensional assessment | Standardized | Not standardized |
| Professionals of the rehabilitation team | GP, nurse, physio- and occupational therapist. Other professionals at need | GP, nurse, physio- and occupational therapist. Other professionals at need |
| Rehabilitation arena | Short term beds in primary care dedicated inpatient rehabilitation centre | Short-term beds in primary care nursing homes |
| Focus of the setting | Continuous rehabilitation focus in an optimistic and realistic setting | Frequent shift of focus between rehabilitation and care |
| Rehabilitation process | | |
| Goals, plan, intervention tailored to the patient | Always | Occasional |
| Measurement instruments | Always, 3-4 regular | Occasional |
| Collaboration between patient, staff, relatives and primary health care | Close, in at least weekly meetings | Occasional |
| Training: Physical-, functional-, ADL- | In groups, one-by-one and self-training | In groups, one-by-one and self-training |
| Training intensity/frequency | Three hours/day | Two hours/day |
PCDIR= Primary Care Dedicated Inpatient Rehabilitation 2. PCNHR= Primary Care Nursing Home Rehabilitation.
Characteristics of older patients surviving at 18 months after primary care inpatient rehabilitation
| Number of patients (n) | 255 | 166 | 89 |
| Age y mean (SD, min-max) | 81.7 (6.8, 65-96) | 81.8 (5.9, 66-95) | 81.5 (6.6, 66-96) |
| Gender men/women (n) | 74/181 | 45/121 | 29/60 |
| Residence (N=254) | | | |
| Own (n) | 198 (78%) | 134 (81%) | 64 (72%) |
| Care-flat/long term nursing home(n) | 56 (22%) | 32 (19%) | 25 (28%) |
| Marital status: Married (n) | 98 (38%) | 60 (36%) | 38 (43%) |
| Alone (n) | 157 (62%) | 106 (64%) | 51 (57%) |
| Diagnoses (N=254) | | | |
| Stroke (n) | 43 (17%) | 30 (18%) | 13 (15%) |
| Osteoarthritis (n) | 34 (13%) | 20 (12%) | 14 (16%) |
| Fracture (n) | 92 (36%) | 66 (40%) | 26 (29%) |
| Other (n) | 85 (34%) | 49 (30%) | 36 (40%) |
| MMSE3, mean (SD) | 25.3 (3.9) | 25.2 | 25.3 |
| (CI) (N=255) | (24.8-25.8) | | |
| SCL104, mean (SD) | 1.4 (0.3) | 1.4 | 1.4 |
| (CI) (N=255) | (1.3-1.4) | | |
| Men/women | | | |
| Age, years | 79.7/82.55 | | |
| Living alone, % | 36/726 | | |
| Fracture, % | 27/406 | | |
| Stroke, % | 30/126 | | |
| 1. PCDIR=Primary Care Dedicated Inpatient Rehabilitation | | | |
| 2. PCNHR=Primary Care Nursing Home Rehabilitation | | | |
| 3. MMSE=Mini Mental Status Evaluation | | | |
| 4. SCL10=Symptom Checklist 10 | | | |
| 5. Independent Samples T-test, p<0.001 95% CI(1.0-4.7) | | | |
| 6. Pearson χ 2 p=0.002 |
Predictors of independenceat 18 months after primary care inpatient rehabilitation of older people
| Constant | 13.5 | .013 | |
| Gender | -.7 | .376 | −2.2-.8 |
| Age | -.1 | .040 | -.2--.005 |
| SI baseline | .5 | <.001 | .4-.6 |
| MMSE | .5 | <.001 | .3-.7 |
| Rehabilitation Method | 2.2 | .003 | .8-3.7 |
Dependent variable SI 18 months after the rehabilitation.
1 Independence=Ability to perform activities of daily living=Sunnaas ADL Index=SI.
2 USB=Ustandardized Coefficient B in a Multiple linear regression analysis, corrected for gender, age and SI at baseline, shows the change in SI at 18 months after rehabilitation (USB) when the variable changes one point.
Mean days in short-term nursing homes from 0–18 months after primary care inpatient rehabilitation of older people in two different settings
| Days in short-term nursing homes | | | | |
| 0 days | n=102(62%) | n=58(66%) | | |
| 1-28 days, Mean | | | | |
| (95%CI) | 16.9(15.1-18.8) | 20.5(16.8-24.1) | 3.6(-7.1-0.1) | 0.06 |
| (n=32, 19%) | (n=13, 15%) | | | |
| >28 days, | | | | |
| Mean(95%CI) | 148.5(91.7-205.6) | 253.6(150.8-356.4) | 104.9(0.28-209.6) | 0.05 |
| (n=32, 19%) | (n=17, 19%) |
1 Primary Care Dedicated Inpatient Rehabilitation.
2 Primary Care Nursing Home Rehabilitation.
3 Independent Samples T-test.
Figure 1Survival curves(Kaplan-Meier) for older patients 0–18 months after primary care rehabilitation in two different settings. Log Rank (Mantel-Cox) χ2 Test P=0.23. PCDIR: Primary Care Dedicated Inpatient Rehabilitation PCNHR: Primary Care Nursing Home Rehabilitation Follow-up time in months.
Rehabilitation and care costsper patient during 18 months after primary care inpatient rehabilitation of older people
| Rehabilitation5 | 7 443 | 10 972 | 3 528 | <0.001 |
| (6 963–7 923) | (9 376–12 369) | (2 455–4 756) | ||
| At-home Care6 | 10 890 | 20 995 | 10 134 | 0.002 |
| (10 221–11 772) | (18 689–23 301) | (4 066–16 202) | ||
| Hospital6 | 2 020 | 1 360 | −660 | 0.3 |
| (1 180–2 865) | (550–2 165) | (−600-1 950) | ||
| Nursing home total6 | 9 092 | 14 820 | 5 728 | 0.2 |
| (5 301–13 253) | (6 897–22 743) | (−3 078–14 505) | ||
| Sum rehabilitation and care | 29 445 | 48 147 | 18 702 | |
| Nursing home 0 days | 0 (n=102, 62%) | 0 (n=58, 66%) | 0 | |
| Nursing home 1–28 days | 4 817 | 5 843 | 1 026 | 0.06 |
| (4 304–5 358) | (4 788–6 869) | (−29-2 021) | ||
| (n=32, 19%) | (n=13, 15%) | | | |
| Nursing home >28 days | 42 380 | 72 276 | 29 897 | 0.05 |
| (26 135–58 596) | (42 978–101574) | (80–59 736) | ||
| (n=32, 19%) | (n=17, 19%) |
1 Costs in €(2009 price level, 1€=8NOK).
2 Primary Care Dedicated Inpatient Rehabilitation.
3 Primary Care Nursing Home Rehabilitation.
4 Independent Samples T-test.
5 PCDIR: n=200, PCNHR: n=100.
6 PCDIR: n=166, PCNHR: n=89.