| Literature DB >> 32164542 |
Carolina Burgos-Díez1,2, Rosa Maria Sequera-Requero3, Francisco José Tarazona-Santabalbina4, Joan Carles Contel-Segura5, Marià Monzó-Planella1, Sebastià Josep Santaeugènia-González6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Preventive home visits are suited for patients with reduced mobility, such as older people. Healthcare needs for older patients are expected to increase due to the extended life expectancy estimated in coming years. The implementation of low-cost, patient-centered methodologies may buffer this rise in health care costs without affecting the quality of service. In order to find the best home care model with less investment, this paper describes a study protocol comparing two models of home care for older people.Entities:
Keywords: Geriatric assessment; Home care models; Preventive home visits; Primary care
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32164542 PMCID: PMC7068968 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-020-1497-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Main characteristics of the two investigated models
| Integrated HC | Functional HC | |
|---|---|---|
| Characteristics of the healthcare team | ||
| Nurse and family doctor. | ||
| The same healthcare team provides HC and manages patients in the primary care center. | The healthcare team is dedicated exclusively to HC. | |
| Healthcare professionals are part of the healthcare team regularly managing patients in the primary care center. | Although not managing patients in the primary care center, the HC team is part of the health care staff of the center and their members participate in the center meetings as specialists. | |
• Regular training of family doctors, including regular stays at mental health and geriatrics units. • Regular training of nurses. | • Regular training of family doctors, including regular stays at mental health and geriatrics units. • Nursing staff receives additional training regarding the management of chronic patients, fragility, and palliative care. | |
| Nurse, family doctor or both | ||
| Services and visit schedule | ||
• Visits of nursing staff scheduled based on the monitoring requirements of each disease as established by local guidelines. • Visits of physician scheduled at physician’s discretion based on the disease progression and clinical status of patients. | ||
| The patient calls the center and the physician available at that moment (not always the one regularly visiting the patient at the primary care center) visits the patient at home. | • During working hours: the patient contacts directly the physician of the HC team. • Outside the working hours: the patient calls the center and the physician available at that moment (not always the one regularly visiting the patient at the primary care center) visits the patient at home. | |
| The patient calls the emergency service; an emergency team and an ambulance are deployed to patient’s home. | ||
| All visits are fully covered by the public health system. | ||
HC home care
Characteristics of the participating centers
| Integrated HC (PC Gran Sol) | Functional HC (PC Apenins) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Location | Badalona, Catalonia, Spain | Badalona, Catalonia, Spain | |
| Professional profile | MDs and nurses specialized in family medicine | MDs and nurses specialized in family medicine | |
| Reference populationb, | 19,442 | 19,043 | |
| Over-Aging indexc, | 11% | 9.2% | < 0.001 |
| Foreign populationd, | 3499 (17.9%) | 3046 (15.9%) | < 0.001 |
| ≥65 years old, | 3480 (17.9%) | 2970 (15.6%) | < 0.001 |
| GMA, | 1.189 (1.173–1.206) | 1.178 (1.161–1.195) | – |
| Mortality, | 7 | 5.7 | 0.143 |
| IT application | eCAP | eCAP |
HC Home Care, GMA Adjusted Morbidity Groups [21]; IT Information Technology, MD Medical Doctor, PC Primary Care
aDifferences between PC Gran Sol and PC Apenins
bData from Msiq (Generalitat de Catalunya©), period between January and December 2015
cThe number of persons aged 74 or over per total of persons over 64 years old
dThe number of subjects with a foreign nationality
Fig. 1Flowchart of interventions to patients during the study
Study variables
| Definition and Measurements | Categories | |
|---|---|---|
| Demographic Characteristics | ||
| Age | At the moment of entering the HC program | 65–74 75–84 > 85 |
| Gender | Male | Female | |
| Health Status | ||
| Caregiver | At the time of entering the HC program | Yes | No |
| Level of dependency | Scale defined by Royal Decree 174/2011; Law 39/2006 of Promotion of Personal Autonomy and Care for People in Situations of Dependency. | Grade I (25–49): Moderate dependency Grade II (50–74): Severe dependency Grade III (75–100): Great dependency |
| Decubitus ulcer | At physician’s discretion | Presence | absence |
| Drugs prescribed | By active substance. | Not polymedicated (< 5) Polymedicated (5–10) Hyperpolymedicated (> 10) |
| Comorbidity burden | Measured by Adjusted Morbidity Groups (GMA) risk assessment tool. GMA considers the type of disease (i.e. acute or chronic), number of systems affected, and complexity of each disease, which is coded by the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-9-CM) and stratify depending on the complexity. | 31 qualitative ordinal GMA levels. |
| Mortality | Death during follow-up | Yes | No |
| Realization of CGA | Yes | No | |
| Assessments included in CGA | ||
| Performance of normal daily tasks | Barthel Scale [ | Total dependency (< 20) Severe dependency (20–60) Moderate dependency (61–90) Mild dependency (91–99) Autonomous (100) |
| Mental health | Pfeiffer’s Test [ | High risk (≤2) Mild cognitive impairment (3–4) Moderate cognitive impairment (5–7) Severe cognitive impairment |
| Decubitus ulceration risk | Braden Test [ | High risk (< 12) Moderate risk (13–14) Low risk (15–18) |
| Social risk | TIRS [ | There is social risk when one indicator over 6 is positive |
| Anxiety | Goldberg Scale [ | Probable anxiety (≥4 positive responses) Probable depression (≥2 positive responses) |
| Geriatric depression scale | Yesavage Scale [ | No depression (1) Possible depression (≥ 2) |
| Mobility | Timed Up and Go Test [ | Normal (< 10) Very little impaired (10–19) Moderately impaired (20–29) Severely impaired (≥30) |
| Comorbidity | Charlson Index [ | No comorbidity (0–1) Low comorbidity burden (2) High comorbidity burden (> 3) |
| Social state | Social Scale [ | No social risk (≤9) Social risk (10–14) Social problem (≥15) |
| Overburden of the caregiver | Zarit Test [ | No overburden (< 46) Intense overburden (> 56) |
| Nutritional state evaluation | MNA [ | Malnutrition (≤7) Malnutrition risk (8–11) Normal nutritional status (≥12) |
| Home adequacy | Revision of home adequacy to determine the need of social worker intervention | Social worker is recommended when at least one item is positive |
| Falls | Number of falls in the last year | – |
| Frailty | Gérontopôle Frailty Screening Tool [ | Frailty identification if one item of the scale is positive. |
| Social services cost | Number and cost of social worker visits | – |
| Quality of life | EuroQOL 5D-3 L [ | No problems (Level 1) Some problems (Level 2) Extreme problems (Level 3) |
| Quality of Care | ||
| Physicians PQI | Prescription Quality Index of the physician [ | Include assessment of three categories: More adequate therapeutic alternatives Hyper prescription of a particular group of drugs Selection indicators to promote safer and more effective alternatives available |
| Prescriptions | Number of prescription events per patient | – |
| Alternative drugs with therapeutic benefit | Percentage of use of the alternative drug as assessed by the physician | – |
| Shared Interdisciplinary Individual plan | Yes | No | |
| Chronicity | Number of Complex Chronic Patients and Advanced Chronic Disease patients in the program | – |
| Satisfaction with health care received | IEXPAC Scale [ | Satisfactory (=10) Unsatisfactory (< 10) |
| Overburden of the caregiver | Zarit Scale [ | No overburden (< 46) Intense overburden (> 56) |
| Resource Utilization | ||
| Family doctor visits | Number of at-home visits, other medical professional, primary care center or virtual appointments of the patient or the caregiver | – |
| Nursing staff visits | Number of at-home visits, other medical professional and primary care center appointments of the patient or the caregiver. Also, number of virtual consultations, including remote evaluation or by phone of medical record | – |
| Hospitalizations | Number of programmed, emergency and daycare admissions | – |
| Readmissions | Number of successive hospitalizations due to the same pathology in less than 30 days | – |
| Admissions to other public health care centers | Number of admissions, including convalescence, subacute, long-lasting and palliative units | – |
| Hospitalizations per year | Days hospitalized | – |
| Intermediate resources | Number and cost of laboratory tests, Radiology and interconsultations | – |
| Pharmaceutical costs | Expenditure per patient and medical professional during a year | – |
| Hospitalization-at-home device use | Number of activations per year and total of hospitalization days | – |
| Social services intensity | Monthly hours spent by the social worker. Costs derived from teleassistance, cleaning and cooking aid, reused orthopedic material and family worker | – |
| Call to emergency services | Number of patient intervention requests per year. | – |
| Perception of healthcare professionals | Qualitative, self-administered questionnaire of difficulties in HC practice, based on the survey reported by Linares et al. [ | |
CGA Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment, HC Home Care