| Literature DB >> 29970027 |
Annika Brucksch1, Falk Hoffmann2, Katharina Allers3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nursing home residents (NHRs) are often transferred to emergency departments (EDs). A great proportion of ED visits is considered inappropriate. There is evidence that male NHRs are more often hospitalised, but this is less clear for ED visits. It is unclear, which influence age has on ED visits. We aimed to study the epidemiology of ED visits in NHRs focusing on age- and sex-specific differences.Entities:
Keywords: Age; ED visit; Emergency department (ED); Hospital admission; Nursing; Nursing home (NH); Nursing home resident (NHR); Sex
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29970027 PMCID: PMC6029412 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-018-0848-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Fig. 1Flowchart of the literature search
Characteristics of included studies
| Author (year) | Country of origin | Study design (data source) | Year of data | Sample | Mean age of residents (% female) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ackermann et al. (1998) [ | USA | Retrospective chart review (ED records and data from the 1995 State of Georgia Annual Nursing Home Questionnaire) | 1995 | 10 NHs with 1300 beds and 4 hospital-based EDs | 65–74 years: 20.7%a |
| Hsiao and Hing (2014) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study (data from the ED component of the 2001–2008 National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS)) | 2001–2008 | NHRs ≥ 65 years (no sample size given) | No data available |
| Kihlgren et al. (2014) [ | Sweden | Cross-sectional follow-up study (RN’s documentation + Residents Assessment Instrument/Minimum Data Set (MDS)) | 2000–2002 | 719 NHRs ≥ 75 years from 24 NHs | Ø 85.8 years (71.0%) |
| LaMantia et al. (2016) [ | USA | Retrospective cohort study (merged data set of Medicare and Medicaid claims and resident-level Minimum Data Set (MDS)) | 1999–2009 | 4491 long-stay NHRs ≥65 years | Ø 79.6 years (66.2%)a |
| McGregor et al. (2014) [ | Canada | Retrospective cohort study (secondary administrative data on NHRs and ED records) | 2005–2008 | 13,140 NHRs from 48 publicly funded NHs | Ø 83.1 years (66.6%) |
| Stephens et al. (2012) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study (NH resident assessment data/Minimum Data Set (MDS) and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) administrative claims)b | 2006 | 132,753 NHRs ≥ 65 years from 2006 national random sample | 65–75 years: 19.5% |
| Stephens et al. (2014) [ | USA | Retrospective cohort study (Medicare administrative claims and NH resident assessment data/Minimum Data Set (MDS))b | 2006 | 112,421 NHRs ≥ 65 years from 2006 national sample | 65–75 years: 19.6% |
NH, nursing home; Ø, mean; ED, emergency department; RN, registered nurses
The Minimum Data Set (MDS) is part of the federally mandated process for clinical assessment of all residents in Medicare and Medicaid certified nursing homes
aCalculated from data given in the publication
bThese articles used the same data set
Summary of quality assessment
| Author (year) | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ackermann et al. (1998) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Not applicable | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
| Hsiao and Hing (2014) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Not clear | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Kihlgren (2014) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Not clear | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| LaMantia et al. (2016) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Not applicable | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| McGregor et al. (2014) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Not applicable | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Stephens et al. (2012) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Not applicable | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Stephens et al. (2014) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Not applicable | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Quality appraisal criteria [21]:
1. Was the sample frame appropriate to address the target population?
2. Were study participants sampled in an appropriate way?
3. Was the sample size adequate?
4. Were the study subjects and setting described in detail?
5. Was the data analysis conducted with sufficient coverage of the identified sample?
6. Were valid methods used for the identification of the condition?
7. Was the condition measured in a standard, reliable way for all participants?
8. Was there appropriate statistical analysis?
9. Was the response rate adequate, and if not, was the low response rate managed appropriately?
ED visits of NHRs
| Author (year) | Prevalence, incidence or number of ED visits and follow-up | Age-specific and sex-specific analyses | Admission to hospital | Number of ED visits per resident | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prevalence or incidence | Regression/model | ||||
| Ackermann et al. (1998) [ | 110 visits per 100 resident years (1488 ED visits made by 873 residents) Follow-up: 1 year | Holm’s Sequential Rejection Algorithm | Admitted to hospital: 42.4% | Number of ED visits per resident | |
| Hsiao and Hing (2014) [ | 123.2 visits per 100 resident years (4970 ED visits) Follow-up: 1 month | Number of visits per 100 resident years | Admitted to hospital: 48.7% | Proportion of residents seen in ED less than 72 h ago: 2.4% | |
| Kihlgren et al. (2014) [ | 150 visits per 100 resident years | Age | Number of ED visits per resident | ||
| LaMantia et al. (2016) [ | 2001: 146.0 visits per 100 resident years | Multivariable cox proportional hazard regression | Admitted to hospital: 36.4% | ||
| McGregor et al. (2014) [ | 62.6 visits per 100 resident yearsc,d (10,710 ED visits) Follow-up: 3 years | Poisson regression | |||
| Stephens et al. (2012) [ | NHRs with at least one ED visit: 62% | Age | Multivariable logistic regression | ||
| Stephens et al. (2014) [ | ED visits: 112,119 | Poisson regression | Admitted to hospital: 44.16% | ||
IRR, Incidence Rate Ratio; OR, Odds Ratio; HR, Hazard Ratio
aNo other information available
bAuthors reported per 1000 NH bed days
cCalculated from data given in the publication
dFor-profit facilities: 69/100 resident years, 1.9/1000 resident days; non-profit facilities: 70/100 resident years, 1.93/1000 resident days; public owned facilities: 51/100 resident years, 1.39/1000 resident days