| Literature DB >> 31340974 |
Bo Kim1,2, Christopher Weatherly3, Courtney Benjamin Wolk4, Enola K Proctor3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Care transition for patients being discharged from inpatient mental healthcare to outpatient settings is a growing focus for healthcare delivery systems. Many studies of this inpatient to outpatient transition use the rate of postdischarge readmissions as a patient-level outcome measure to assess the quality of transition. However, it is unclear how studies define the measure, and whether there is a shared understanding by the field regarding which definition is appropriate for which circumstances. This scoping review thus aims to examine how published studies have approached measuring unnecessary psychiatric readmissions. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: The scoping review will be structured according to Levac et al's enhancement to Arksey and O'Malley's framework for conducting scoping reviews. The protocol is registered through the Open Science Framework (https://osf.io/5nxuc/). We will search literature databases for studies that (1) are about care transition processes associated with unnecessary psychiatric readmissions and (2) specify use of at least one readmission time interval (ie, time period since previous discharge from inpatient care, within which a hospitalisation can be considered a readmission). Screening and review of articles will be carried out by two reviewers, first independently then involving a third reviewer as needed for consensus. We will assess review findings through both tabular and thematic analyses, noting prevalent trends in study characteristics and emergent themes across our reviewed studies. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This work comes at a time of heightened interest by many mental healthcare systems in high-quality practices that structure their care processes towards effective inpatient to outpatient transitions. Findings will support the systems' careful examination of alternative potential transitional interventions, helping to ensure that their often limited quality enhancement resources are put to optimal use. We will focus on disseminating our findings to the healthcare community through strong communication infrastructures and connections with health system stakeholders that our multidisciplinary study consultants will foster throughout this study. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: administrative data; care transition; hospital readmission; mental health; patient discharge
Year: 2019 PMID: 31340974 PMCID: PMC6661670 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030696
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Definitions of domains for which data will be extracted
| Domain | Definition |
| Author(s) | Author(s) of the article |
| Year | Article’s year of publication |
| Country | Article’s country of publication |
| Objective | Aim of the study |
| Design | Approach taken by the study to reach its aim—for example, experimental/observational, quantitative/qualitative/mixed methods, review |
| Healthcare context and setting | Clinical, organisational and geographical environment in which the study was conducted—for example, inpatient psychiatric care, integrated healthcare system, urban/rural practice |
| Study/target population | Population to which the study results are meant to be applicable |
| Diagnoses and comorbidities | Primary diagnoses defining the target population and comorbidities accounted for in the study |
| Sample size | Number of individuals, clinics and/or organisations (depending on the study’s focus) involved in the study |
| Intervention | The difference across which study outcomes were examined (ie, independent variable)—for example, a newly implemented inpatient to outpatient discharge planning tool |
| Control | Individuals, clinics and/or organisations (depending on the study’s focus) used as a baseline against which the intervention’s impact was assessed—for example, parallel, historical, not applicable |
| Voluntariness of re/admissions | Whether the re/admissions being considered by the study are voluntary and/or involuntary |
| Readmission time interval | Duration since the previous discharge from inpatient care, within which an acute care hospitalisation was considered to be a readmission |
| Criteria for designating a readmission as unnecessary | Standards applied by the study to designate an admission as a readmission—for example, occurred within a certain readmission time interval of a prior admission, diagnostically related to a prior admission |
| Criteria for excluding a readmission from being considered unnecessary | Standards applied to exclude a readmission from being a part of the study’s readmission rate calculation—for example, associated with conditions for which subsequent readmissions are expected |
| Risk adjustments in calculating readmission rates | Factors potentially influencing the readmission rate (and are independent of care quality) that the study accounted for—for example, symptom severity |
| Other outcomes | Measurements other than for readmissions that the study also examined across its comparison groups (ie, dependent variables) |
| Key findings | Main results of the study |
| Additional notes | Other information from the article that may be pertinent to this scoping review |
Anticipated timeline for scoping review activities
| Research activity | Research month | |||||||
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | |
| Stage 1: defining the research question (completed) | ||||||||
| Stage 2: identifying relevant literature | X | |||||||
| Stage 3: study selection | X | X | X | |||||
| Stage 4: data extraction | X | X | X | X | ||||
| Stage 5: collating, summarising and reporting the results | X | X | X | |||||
| Stage 6: consultation process and engagement of knowledge users | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
| Patient and public involvement | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |