| Literature DB >> 31392581 |
Fatima R N Sabir1,2, Justine Tomlinson3,4, Barry Strickland-Hodge2, Heather Smith1.
Abstract
Background The patient transition from a hospital to a post-discharge healthcare setting has potential to disrupt continuity of medication management and increase the risk of harm. "Connect with Pharmacy" is a new electronic web-based transfer of care initiative employed by Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust. This allows the sharing of discharge information between the hospital and a patient's chosen community pharmacy. Objective We investigated whether the timely sharing of discharge information with community pharmacies via "Connect with Pharmacy" reduced hospital readmission rates in older patients. Method To evaluate intervention efficacy, hospital admission data was retrospectively collected. For primary analysis, admission rates were tracked 6-months prior (baseline) and 6-months post-intervention. Secondary measures included effect on total length of stay if readmitted, emergency department attendance and duration, and impact of polypharmacy. Main outcome measure The rate of non-elective hospital readmissions, 6-months post-intervention. Results In the sample (n = 627 patients; Mean age = 81 years), emergency readmission rates following the intervention (M = 1.1, 95% CI [0.98, 1.22]) reduced by 16.16% relative to baseline (M = 1.31, 95% CI [1.21, 1.42]) (W = 54,725; p < 0.001). There was no reduction in total length of stay. Subsidiary analysis revealed a post-intervention reduction in number of days spent in hospital lasting more than three days (χ2 = 13.37, df = 1, p < 0 .001). There were no statistically reliable differences in the remaining secondary measures. Conclusion The results showed a reduction in readmissions and potential post-intervention length of stay, indicating there may be further benefits for our older patients' experiences and hospital flow.Entities:
Keywords: Care transitions; Community pharmacy; Elderly; Hospital readmissions; Older people; United kingdom
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31392581 PMCID: PMC6800861 DOI: 10.1007/s11096-019-00887-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Clin Pharm
Fig. 1Flow chart detailing the pre-processing steps involved in obtaining the final sample (n = 627) used for statistical analysis from the original dataset comprising 997 patients
Fig. 2Frequency distribution of the number of total emergency admissions pre-intervention (6 months) (Panel A; light blue) and post-intervention (Panel B; dark blue)
Proportion of patient readmission rates ≤ 1 & > 1 pre-and post-intervention for the total sample (n = 627)
| Pre-referral admission rates | Post-referral readmission rates | Change | |
|---|---|---|---|
| No readmission | 193 (30.78%) | 293 (46.73%) | + 100 ( + 15.95%) |
| Re-admissions equal to 1 | 220 (35.08%) | 163 (26.00%) | − 57 (− 9.00%) |
| Re-admissions greater than 1 | 214 (34.13%) | 171 (27.27%) | − 43 (− 6.86%) |
Fig. 3Frequency distribution of the total length of stay on the ward at LTHT pre- (6 months) (Panel A) and post-intervention (Panel B)
Contingency Table showing the proportion of LoS ≤ 3 & > 3 days pre-and post-intervention
| Pre-intervention LoS (%) | Post-intervention LoS (%) | Change | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Less than or equal to 3 | 327 (52.15%) | 388 (61.88%) | + 61 (9.73%) |
| Greater than 3 | 300 (47.85%) | 239 (38.12%) | − 61 (− 9.73%) |
Fig. 4Positive correlation between the number of medications at discharge and the total number of admissions across pre- and post- intervention monitoring periods. Each coloured circle represents an individual patient. The dark grey line indicates best fit and the shaded region around the regression line is the 95% CI