| Literature DB >> 25244946 |
Robert E Burke1, Ruixin Guo, Allan V Prochazka, Gregory J Misky.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Systematic attempts to identify best practices for reducing hospital readmissions have been limited without a comprehensive framework for categorizing prior interventions. Our research aim was to categorize prior interventions to reduce hospital readmissions using the ten domains of the Ideal Transition of Care (ITC) framework, to evaluate which domains have been targeted in prior interventions and then examine the effect intervening on these domains had on reducing readmissions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25244946 PMCID: PMC4180324 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-14-423
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Figure 1Selection of studies. Legend: Selection of studies after application of inclusion and exclusion criteria is shown.
Details of studies included in the analysis
| Study | Total # domains | Disease specific | Readmissions | Duration (days) | Size |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Balaban 2008 [ | 7 | All | NS | 31 | 96 |
| Braun 2009 [ | 1 | All | NS | 30 | 309 |
| Coleman 2006 [ | 8 | All | All-cause | 30 | 750 |
| Dudas 2001 [ | 2 | All | NS | 30 | 221 |
| Dunn 1994 [ | 1 | All | NS | 180 | 59 |
| Evans 1993 [ | 4 | All | All-cause | 30 | 835 |
| Forster 2005 [ | 3 | All | NS | 30 | 620 |
| Jaarsma 1999 [ | 3 | CHF | NS | 30 | 179 |
| Jack 2009 [ | 8 | All | All-cause* | 30 | 738 |
| Koehler 2009 [ | 5 | All | All-cause | 30 | 41 |
| Kwok 2004 [ | 4 | COPD | NS | 28 | 149 |
| McDonald 2001 [ | 5 | CHF | NS | 30 | 70 |
| Naylor 1994 [ | 7 | All | All-cause | 42 | 142 |
| Rainville 1999 [ | 3 | CHF | Disease-specific | 30 | 34 |
| Wong 2008 [ | 1 | All | NS | 30 | 332 |
| Atienza 2004 [ | 5 | CHF | All-cause | 365 | 338 |
| Blue 2001 [ | 5 | CHF | All-cause | 365 | 165 |
| Bourbeau 2003 [ | 2 | COPD | All-cause | 365 | 191 |
| Chaudry 2010 [ | 2 | CHF | NS | 180 | 1653 |
| Cline 1998 [ | 4 | CHF | NS | 365 | 190 |
| DeBusk 2004 [ | 3 | CHF | NS | 365 | 462 |
| Doughty 2002 [ | 4 | CHF | All-cause | 365 | 197 |
| Ekman 1998 [ | 4 | CHF | NS | 180 | 158 |
| Gillespie 2009 [ | 4 | All | NS | 365 | 368 |
| Holland 2005 [ | 4 | All | NS | 180 | 872 |
| Kasper 2002 [ | 5 | CHF | All-cause | 365 | 200 |
| Kimmelstiel 2004 [ | 5 | CHF | Disease-specific | 90 | 200 |
| Koelling 2005 [ | 1 | CHF | Disease-specific | 180 | 223 |
| Laramee 2003 [ | 7 | CHF | NS | 90 | 287 |
| Ledwidge 2003 [ | 4 | CHF | Disease-specific | 90 | 98 |
| Mejhert 2004 [ | 4 | CHF | NS | 545 | 208 |
| Murray 2007 [ | 2 | CHF | NS | 365 | 314 |
| Nazareth 2001 [ | 5 | All | NS | 90 | 362 |
| Peikes 2012 [ | 7 | All | All-cause | 365 | 2166 |
| Rich 1995 [ | 6 | CHF | All-cause | 90 | 282 |
| Riegel 2002 [ | 5 | CHF | Disease-specific | 180 | 358 |
| Stewart 1999 [ | 5 | CHF | All-cause | 180 | 200 |
| Stromberg 2003 [ | 4 | CHF | All-cause | 90 | 106 |
| Takahashi 2012 [ | 2 | All | NS | 365 | 205 |
| Tsuyuki 2004 [ | 3 | CHF | NS | 180 | 276 |
| Weinberger 1996 [ | 4 | All | NS | 180 | 1396 |
| Marusic [ | 1 | All | NS | 30 | 160 |
|
| |||||
| Anderson 2005 [ | 3 | CHF | Disease-specific | 30 | 121 |
| Bostrom 1996 [ | 1 | All | NS | 30 | 919 |
| Gow 1999 [ | 3 | All | NS | 28 | 77 |
| Harrison 2011 [ | 1 | All | All-cause | 30 | 30272 |
| Einstadter 1996 [ | 4 | All | NS | 30 | 478 |
| Lucas 1998 [ | 1 | All | NS | 30 | 285 |
| McPhee 1983 [ | 1 | All | NS | 30 | 301 |
| O’Dell 2005 [ | 2 | CHF | NS | 30 | 237 |
| Sorknaes 2011 [ | 1 | COPD | Disease-specific | 28 | 100 |
| Steeman 2006 [ | 3 | All | NS | 15 | 824 |
| Walker 2009 [ | 4 | All | NS | 30 | 724 |
| Ohuabunwa [ | 7 | All | NS | 30 | 104 |
|
| |||||
| Brown 1997 [ | 5 | COPD | All-cause | 28 | 726 |
| Creason 2001 [ | 3 | CHF | All-cause | 30 | 293 |
| Dai 2003 [ | 3 | CNS | NS | 30 | 283 |
| Dedhia 2009 [ | 4 | All | All-cause | 30 | 75 |
| Hess 2010 [ | 2 | All | NS | 3 | 362 |
| Houghton 1996 [ | 1 | All | NS | 28 | 422 |
| Kramer 2007 [ | 1 | All | NS | 30 | 283 |
| Smith 1995 [ | 3 | All | All-cause | 10 | N/A |
| Mudge 2010 [ | 6 | CHF | NS | 365 | 416 |
| Amarasingham [ | 4 | All | All-cause | 30 | 1747 |
| Garin [ | 1 | CHF | NS | 90 | 363 |
| Graham [ | 1 | All | All-cause | 30 | 3295 |
Legend: Interventions, number of domains included, whether the patient population was disease-specific or not, whether readmissions were statistically significantly reduced (NS = not significant, disease-specific means readmissions were reduced in a specific disease population), duration, and study size are listed. *Composite endpoint of “hospital utilization”.
Figure 2Number of ITC domains addressed per intervention. Legend: The distribution of the number of domains of the ITC framework included in each intervention is shown.
Figure 3ITC domains addressed across interventions. Legend: The percent of interventions that included a particular domain of the ITC framework is shown. MM = Monitoring and Managing Symptoms After Discharge; EP = Patient Education to Promote Self-Management; CCA = Coordinating Care Among Team Members; DP = Discharge Planning, FO = Outpatient Follow-Up; EH = Enlisting Help of Social and Community Supports; MS = Medication Safety; AT = Accuracy, Timeliness, Clarity, and Organization of Information; CCI = Complete Communication of Information; AP = Advance Care Planning.
The ten domains of the ITC and their association with readmission reduction when part of an intervention
| Domain | Description | p-value* | OR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Focuses on the content of the information delivered to the receiving clinician | 0.80 | 2.2 (0.3, 13.9) |
|
| Highlights if/when this information is received by the receiving clinician, and how it is optimally presented to maximize utility | 0.80 | 1.4 (0.3, 6.2) |
|
| Medication reconciliation across the continuum of care | 0.99 | 1.0 (0.4, 2.7) |
|
| Education to patients and caregivers, using principles of health literacy, teach-back, and encouraging self-advocacy | 0.09 | 3.3 (1.1, 10.0) |
|
| Multi-modality interventions (telehealth, calls, visits in clinic and/or home), and a responsible clinician to respond to concerns | 0.03 | 8.5 (1.8, 41.1) |
|
| Adequate assessment of home environment and support and implementing help if needed | 0.07 | 4.0 (1.3, 12.6) |
|
| Establish health care proxy and goals of care | N/A | N/A |
|
| Share medical records, communicate with all team members, optimize continuity of providers, formalize handoffs | 0.80 | 1.6 (0.6, 4.2) |
|
| Emphasizes identifying patient needs prior to discharge, implementing interventions prior to discharge | 0.80 | 1.3 (0.5, 3.5) |
|
| Follow-up with the right provider(s), appropriate time frame, preparation for visit | 0.80 | 1.2 (0.5, 3.4) |
*False discovery rate-adjusted p-values are reported.