| Literature DB >> 35431701 |
Malcolm B Doupe1,2, Jennifer E Enns1, Sara Kreindler3, Thekla Brunkert1, Dan Chateau1, Paul Beaudin3, Gayle Halas2, Alan Katz1, Tara Stewart3.
Abstract
Introduction: Acute care hospitals often inadequately prepare older adults to transition back to the community. Interventions that seek to improve this transition process are usually evaluated using healthcare use outcomes (e.g., hospital re-visit rates) only, and do not gather provider and patient perspectives about strategies to better integrate care. This protocol describes how we will use complementary research approaches to evaluate an in-hospital sub-acute care (SAC) intervention, designed to better prepare and transition older adults home.Entities:
Keywords: administrative data; implementation measures; mixed methods; program evaluation; sub-acute care
Year: 2022 PMID: 35431701 PMCID: PMC8973798 DOI: 10.5334/ijic.5953
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Integr Care Impact factor: 5.120
Sub-Acute Care* Intervention Components.
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| COMPONENT | DESCRIPTION |
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| Service Purpose | To (1) provide quality care to patients who require daily individual assessment, general medical care, and interventions to enhance their functional, cognitive, psychosocial, and spiritual well-being; and (2) liaise with various community-based and institutional programs to facilitate out-of-hospital patient transitions. |
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| Patient Profile | Adult patients 18+ years old with a general medical diagnosis and who have stable vitals; low/stable oxygen requirements; are unlikely to decompensate, and; do not require acute specialised hospitalized services. The target length of stay for SAC patients is 14–16 days. |
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| Admission Pathways & Processes | SAC patients are admitted (1) directly from the onsite urgent care departments (primary pathway); (2) offsite from one of three emergency departments, or; (3) via transfer from an acute care medicine bed. A Central Bed Access service provides a gate keeping function, usually prioritizing direct onsite (urgent care) admissions. |
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| Team Composition, Recruitment & Training | SAC patients are visited by an attending physician at least once daily and nursing care is provided by a mix of registered and licensed practical nurses. SAC teams are comprised of an extensive complement of allied health disciplines including clinical nutrition, speech-language pathology, occupational therapy, physiotherapy, pharmacy, respiratory therapy, social work, spiritual health and therapeutic recreation. Specialist consults from off-site programs such as psychiatry, geriatrics, and orthopedics are available as-needed. Hospital-based nurse case coordinators liaise with a range of community and institutional (e.g., nursing home) staff to facilitate out-of-hospital care transitions. |
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| Care Planning & Communication | Care plans are initiated by the attending family physician within one day of patient admission. Four processes are used to support care planning, delivery & inter-professional collaboration. These include: |
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| Discharge Process & Criteria | Discharge planning begins at the time of patient admission and is supported by clinical decision software. Patients are eligible for discharge when: |
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* Termed “Lower Acuity Care” in the Winnipeg Health Region.
Overview of Evaluation Domains, Data Sources and Study Timeline.
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| PHASE | EVALUATION DOMAIN | DATA SOURCE | TIMELINE |
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| Healthcare Service Outcomes | Linked person-level administrative healthcare use records | Months 1–12 |
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| Implementation Outcomes | Medical chart audits | Months 12–16 |
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| Implementation Outcomes | Provider interviews | Months 16–24 |
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| Patient/Informal Caregiver Experiences | Patient/informal caregiver interviews | ||
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| Integration of the Results | Phases 1–3 | Months 24–36 |
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Administrative Datasets from the Data Repository used in this Study.
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| REPOSITORY FILE | PURPOSE |
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| Population Repository | This file defines registered Manitobans by key socio-demographic factors (age, sex, marital status, income quintile) and death date (using the Repository cancellation code). |
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| Admission, Discharge, and Transfer File | This file provides date-stamped and bed-level hospital use data and will be used to (1) identify (using bed identifiers) SAC patients, and (2) define detailed hospital transitions pathways leading to and from SAC units. |
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| Hospital Discharge Abstract Database | This file provides date- and site-stamped data on hospital use parameters, and up to 26 international classification of disease (ICD-10-CA) codes to define patient’s admitting diagnosis and complications that arise after hospital admission. |
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| Emergency Department Information System | This file provides date- and time-stamped records of emergency department visits by site and patient acuity. |
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| Medical Claims | This file provides date-stamped record on ambulatory care physician visits. One ICD-9-CM (clinical modification) code is provided per visit. |
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| Home Care | This file provides the start- and end-date, volume and type of home care services received by each registered Manitoban (e.g., to identify prevalence [before SAC] and incidence [after SAC] home care users). Use of the Priority Home and Rapid Response Nursing programs are included in this overall file. |
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| Nursing Home | This file provides the admission and exit date of nursing home use (to determine SAC disposition status). |
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| Supported Living | This file provides the admission and exit date of congregate community housing use (to determine SAC dispositions status). |
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| Drug Program Information Network | This file provides dispensation-level data on prescription drugs dispensed from retail (not in hospital) pharmacies (i.e., by their anatomical, therapeutic & chemical classification system). |
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