Literature DB >> 31971019

Under-coding of dementia and other conditions indicates scope for improved patient management: A longitudinal retrospective study of dementia patients in Australia.

Kara Cappetta1, Luise Lago1, Jan Potter1,2, Lyn Phillipson1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Under-coding of dementia during hospitalisation results in an inability to identify all patients with dementia using hospital administrative data. Clinical coding can be viewed as a proxy for management; therefore, under-coding indicates dementia was not considered in the patient's management. While under-coding of dementia is well established, there is sparse evidence on whether dementia is coded in subsequent hospitalisations among patients with a known diagnosis.
OBJECTIVE: (a) To describe patterns of dementia coding over 5 years after a first-coded (i.e. index) admission for dementia; (b) to identify factors associated with clinical coding of dementia; and (c) to identify patient subgroups at risk of not being coded to inform future interventions to improve hospital identification and management of dementia.
METHOD: Retrospective study of longitudinal hospital data from 1 July 2006 to 30 June 2015 for 7919 patients hospitalised during the 5 years' post-index admission for dementia in a regional local health district of New South Wales, Australia.
RESULTS: Dementia was coded in 63.9% of admissions in the 12 months following index admission for dementia; this decreased to 53.7% after 5 years. Patients were 20% more likely to have dementia actively managed when it co-occurred with delirium. Under-coding varied across conditions, with dementia more likely to be coded in admissions for falls and pneumonitis, and less likely for heart failure, pneumonia and urinary tract infection (UTI).
CONCLUSION: The frequency with which dementia was not coded highlights opportunities to improve identification and management of dementia through dementia-specific care, enhanced clinical protocols, and interventions focused around heart failure, pneumonia and UTI admissions.

Entities:  

Keywords:  clinical coding; dementia; health information management; health services research; hospitals

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 31971019     DOI: 10.1177/1833358319897928

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Inf Manag        ISSN: 1833-3583            Impact factor:   3.185


  2 in total

1.  Improving recording and reporting of dementia and frailty via electronic patient record by ambulance staff in a single service (IDEAS).

Authors:  Patryk Jadzinski; Helen Pocock; Chloe Lofthouse-Jones; Phil King; Sarah Taylor; Ed England; Julian Cavalier; Carole Fogg
Journal:  Br Paramed J       Date:  2021-12-01

2.  Improving ascertainment of suicidal ideation and suicide attempt with natural language processing.

Authors:  Cosmin A Bejan; Michael Ripperger; Drew Wilimitis; Ryan Ahmed; JooEun Kang; Katelyn Robinson; Theodore J Morley; Douglas M Ruderfer; Colin G Walsh
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-09-07       Impact factor: 4.996

  2 in total

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