| Literature DB >> 27422733 |
Claire Goodman1, Tom Dening2, Adam L Gordon3, Susan L Davies4, Julienne Meyer5, Finbarr C Martin6, John R F Gladman3, Clive Bowman5, Christina Victor7, Melanie Handley4, Heather Gage8, Steve Iliffe9, Maria Zubair10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Care home residents in England have variable access to health care services. There is currently no coherent policy or consensus about the best arrangements to meet these needs. The purpose of this review was to explore the evidence for how different service delivery models for care home residents support and/or improve wellbeing and health-related outcomes in older people living and dying in care homes.Entities:
Keywords: Care home; Health outcomes; Long-term care; Older people; Realist review
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27422733 PMCID: PMC4947336 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-016-1493-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Preliminary Programme theories developed from Stage 1
| Health care for older people resident in care homes achieves optimal outcomes if | How expressed in service delivery models/intervention research |
|---|---|
|
| Interventions that use financial payments, sanctions and audit to improve particular health care outcomes and adherence to protocols and guidance |
|
| Interventions that focus on assessment maintenance and improvement of function, management of diseases and symptoms associated with old age through education, training of care home staff and access to visiting clinical experts and care home specialist teams |
| Interventions are predicated on | Emphasis on strategies that support co-design and joint priority setting to achieve improved outcomes for residents, e.g. shared education and training, continuity of contact with particular clinical experts, shared learning, feedback on achievements between health and care home staff |
bold type denotes the working title of each programme theory
Focus of care home papers reviewed
| Research focus of papers reviewed with one or more outcomes of interest (medication use; use of out-of-hours services; hospital admissions including emergency department attendances; length of h | References |
|---|---|
| Medication management | [ |
| End of life care | [ |
| Resident health promotion (e.g. nutrition, flu prevention, tissue viability, oral health, functional improvement, dementia care, falls prevention) | [ |
| Management of depression and related interventions | [ |
| Pay for performance/audit | [ |
| Interventions to promote health service use, integration of health and social care services in care homes including specialist roles and reduce use of secondary care | [ |
Fig. 1Flow chart of evidence retrieval