| Literature DB >> 26032780 |
Anna N Millar1, Carmel M Hughes2, Cristín Ryan3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intermediate care (IC) describes a range of services targeted at older people, aimed at preventing unnecessary hospitalisation, promoting faster recovery from illness and maximising independence. Older people are at increased risk of medication-related adverse events, but little is known about the provision of medicines management services in IC facilities. This study aimed to describe the current provision of medicines management services in IC facilities in Northern Ireland (NI) and to explore healthcare workers' (HCWs) and patients' views of, and attitudes towards these services and the IC concept.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26032780 PMCID: PMC4450851 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-015-0869-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Overview of intermediate care, Department of Health Social Services and Public Safety, Northern Ireland [39]
| • Intermediate care services should be targeted at people who would otherwise face: |
| – Inappropriate admission to acute in-patient care; |
| – Long-term residential/nursing home care; |
| – Unnecessary prolonged hospital stays; or |
| – Continuing in-patient care. |
| Key Principles: |
| • IC should be provided on the basis of a comprehensive person-centred assessment of need, resulting in a structured individual care plan that, where appropriate, involves active therapy, treatment or opportunity for recovery; |
| • IC should have a planned outcome of maximising independence and typically enabling service users to remain or resume living at home; |
| • IC should be time-limited, usually no longer than six weeks and frequently as little as 1-2 weeks or less; and |
| • IC should involve cross-professional working, with a single assessment framework, increasingly integrated professional records and shared protocols. |
Fig. 1Interview schedule content (HCWs = healthcare workers; MDT = multi-disciplinary team)
Settings of IC facilities included in the study
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| A more recent model of IC, these privately owned nursing home facilities which, in addition to long-term nursing care, also provided IC in varying numbers of beds purchased by the Trusts. Medical care provision in these homes ranged from daily visits to ‘when required’ visits from a contracted GP (medical officer). In addition, three of the facilities had weekly input from a consultant geriatrician. |
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| These facilities were Trust-owned residential care homes, staffed primarily by healthcare assistants (support staff who provide basic care under the guidance of qualified healthcare professionals). Of the three IC facilities in this category, two managers had nursing backgrounds and one had a social work background. There was less medical input in these facilities in comparison to the other categories and medical cover was provided by either the patients’ own GP or a local, contracted GP. |
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| These were long-established facilities, sometimes referred to as ‘community hospitals’, whose services pre-date the label of IC. One facility included in this category functioned very much as a typical hospital ward with medical cover provided 24/7 by Trust medical staff including junior doctors, registrars and consultants. The three other facilities in this category also had hospital ward-like environments, although medical cover was provided on a day-time basis by local GPs whose practices were within the vicinity of the facility. |
Demographic profile of interview participants (n = 43)
| Participanta | Description | IC facility setting | Trust |
|---|---|---|---|
| HCW1 | Home manager | Residential home | A |
| HCW2 | Senior healthcare assistant | Residential home | A |
| P1 | Female | Residential home | A |
| HCW3 | Nurse | Nursing home | A |
| HCW4 | Nurse | Nursing home | A |
| P2 | Male | Nursing home | A |
| HCW5 | Home manager | Nursing home | A |
| HCW6 | Nurse | Nursing home | A |
| HCW7 | Senior healthcare assistant | Residential home | A |
| HCW8 | Senior healthcare assistant | Residential home | A |
| P3 | Female | Residential home | A |
| P4 | Male | Residential home | A |
| P5 | Female | Residential home | A |
| HCW9 | Home manager | Nursing home | A |
| HCW10 | Nurse | Nursing home | A |
| HCW11 | Nurse | Nursing home | A |
| P6 | Female | Nursing home | A |
| P7 | Male | Nursing home | A |
| HCW12 | Home manager | Residential home | A |
| HCW13 | Pharmacist | Non-acute hospital | B |
| HCW14 | Nurse | Non-acute hospital | B |
| HCW15 | Nurse | Non-acute hospital | B |
| P8 | Female | Non-acute hospital | B |
| P9 | Male | Non-acute hospital | B |
| HCW16 | Nurse | Non-acute hospital | B |
| HCW17 | Nurse | Non-acute hospital | B |
| HCW18 | Nurse | Non-acute hospital | B |
| P10 | Male | Non-acute hospital | B |
| P11 | Female | Non-acute hospital | B |
| HCW19 | Nurse | Non-acute hospital | B |
| P12 | Male | Non-acute hospital | B |
| P13 | Female | Non-acute hospital | B |
| HCW20 | Nurse | Nursing home | C |
| HCW21 | General Practitioner | Nursing home | C |
| P14 | Male | Nursing home | C |
| P15 | Female | Nursing home | C |
| HCW22 | Nurse | Non-acute hospital | C |
| HCW23 | Medical doctor | Non-acute hospital | C |
| P16 | Male | Non-acute hospital | C |
| P17 | Female | Non-acute hospital | C |
| P18 | Male | Non-acute hospital | C |
| HCW24 | Consultant Geriatrician | Nursing home | C |
| HCW25 | Pharmacist | Nursing home | C |
aKey: HCW = Healthcare worker, P = Patient