| Literature DB >> 27245979 |
Suzanne Timmons1, Emma O'Shea2, Desmond O'Neill3, Paul Gallagher1, Anna de Siún1, Denise McArdle4, Patricia Gibbons4, Sean Kennelly3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Admission to an acute hospital can be distressing and disorientating for a person with dementia, and is associated with decline in cognitive and functional ability. The objective of this audit was to assess the quality of dementia care in acute hospitals in the Republic of Ireland.Entities:
Keywords: Antipsychotics; Assessment; Audit; Dementia; Discharge planning; Hospitals; Quality of care; Specialist services; Staff training
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27245979 PMCID: PMC4886443 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-016-0293-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Hospital characteristics and charts reviewed by bed capacity
| Hospital size | 80-150 beds | 151-300 beds | 301-600 beds | 601-1000 beds |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of geriatricians in the hospital | 1-2 | 2-3 | 2-4 | 3-5 |
| Number of hospitals | 9 | 9 | 12 | 5 |
| Number of Charts Reviewed | 173 | 178 | 212 | 97 |
Patient demographic information
| Sex (% female, n) | 61.8, 408 |
| Age (Median, IQR) | 83, 79-87 |
| Admitted from home (%, n) | 62.1, 410 |
| Admitted from residential care (%, n) | 32.7, 216 |
| Admitted to Medical Ward (%, n) | 66, 436 |
| Admitted to Care of the Elderly Ward (%, n) | 9.1, 60 |
| Admitted to Surgical Ward (%, n) | 8.8, 58 |
| Treated on an end of life care pathway (%, n) | 5.6, 37 |
| Referred to Specialist Palliative Care (%, n) | 6.7, 44 |
| Decision recorded for resuscitation (%, n) | 32.5, 215 |
| In-hospital mortality (%, n) | 7.7, 51 |
| Discharged to residential care (%, n) | 51.4, 339 |
| Discharged home (%, n) | 31.7, 209 |
| New institutionalization post-discharge (%, n) | 35, 144 |
| Length of Stay (Median, IQR) | 12, 7-28 |
Fig. 1Physical Assessments Received by Patients with Dementia during Admission (n = 660)
Fig. 2Mental Status Assessments Received by Patients with Dementia during Admission (n = 660)
Assessments completed (n = 660) by hospital size (Bed Capacity)
| % (% range) | 80-150 ( | 151-300 ( | 301-600 ( | 601-1000 ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical Assessment | ||||
| Functioning | 44 (20-100) | 41 (10-88) | 36 (10-100) | 15 (5-30) |
| Nutrition | 83 (47-95) | 80 (48-84) | 72 (29-90) | 66 (40-85) |
| BMI | 66 (8-94) | 47 (11-81) | 44 (29-100) | 46 (25-63) |
| Mobility | 84 (50-100) | 88 (71-100) | 93 (76-100) | 91 (75-100) |
| Continence | 89 (73-100) | 84 (52-100) | 82 (20-100) | 83 (50-100) |
| Pain | 65 (10-100) | 77 (40-95) | 80 (55-100) | 74 (60-90) |
| Pressure Sore Risk | 84 (5-100) | 93 (90-100) | 84 (40-100) | 88 (65-100) |
| Mental Assessment | ||||
| Cognition | 50 (9-95) | 45 (19-75) | 38 (10-55) | 39 (20-53) |
| Delirium Screen | 23 (0-100) | 18 (10-30) | 37 (5-65) | 48 (20-75) |
| Behavioural & Psychological Symptoms | 9 (0-41) | 10 (0-25) | 14 (0-25) | 28 (15-59) |
| Mood | 15 (0-100) | 10 (0-20) | 14 (0-59) | 23 (10-41) |
| Collateral History | 29 (13-53) | 34 (20-56) | 62 (35-82) | 74 (60-94) |
Ward access to specialist services (n = 77)
| Speciality service | No access | Limiteda | Monday-Friday | Monday-Sunday |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liaison Psychiatry | 4 % | 3 % | 42 % | 51 % |
| Psychiatry of Old Age | 26 % | 3 % | 58 % | 13 % |
| Geriatric Medicine | 16 % | - | 52 % | 32 % |
| Occupational Therapy | 21 % | - | 79 % | - |
| Social Work | 47 % | - | 52 % | 1 % |
| Pharmacy | 0 % | 1 % | 32 % | 67 % |
| Physiotherapy | 0 % | 1 % | 51 % | 48 % |
| Dietetics | 7 % | 5 % | 88 % | - |
| Speech & Language | 9 % | 10 % | 81 % | - |
| Psychology | 91 % | - | 9 % | - |
| Infection Control | 1 % | 3 % | 63 % | 33 % |
| Tissue Viability | 29 % | 16 % | 54 % | 1 % |
| Continence | 66 % | 8 % | 26 % | - |
| Palliative Care | 3 % | 8 % | 21 % | 68 % |
a‘Limited’ access refers to 3 or less days per week
Fig. 3Dementia Awareness Training Provided to Staff by Hospitals in Previous 12 Months
Fig. 4Systems in Place to Support Staff Caring for People with Dementia