Friday 2 August 2013

Home care scares

This week home care services were under the media microscope with the revelation that delivery costs are rising.  Age Scotland's Doug Anthoney responded. New figures showing that spending by Local Authorities on Free Personal and Nursing Care has increased from £133 million in 2003/4 … Continue reading

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Marr's wife criticises care system

Andrew Marr's wife has hit out at the level of post-hospital care available to people who have suffered a stroke . Jackie Ashley, a Guardian columnist, claims that not enough is done to look after...

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Focus on Alcohol Misuse among Older People

Many public health campaigns on the misuse of alcohol are aimed at younger age groups. However, there is evidence that alcohol misuse is increasing in people over the age of 65.

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Annual Lecture ‘Sex, Health and the Long Life’

17/09/2013 - 19:00
17/09/2013 - 21:00

Mercers Institute for Successful Ageing (MISA) 

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The impact of a new emergency admission avoidance system for older people on length of stay and same-day discharges

Background: unplanned hospital admissions of older patients continue to attract the attention of UK policymakers, advisors and media. Reducing the number and length of stay (LOS) of these admissions has the potential to save NHS substantial costs while reducing iatrogenic risks. Some NHS trusts have introduced geriatric admission-avoidance systems, but evidence of their effectiveness is lacking. In September 2010, The Royal Free Hospital and Haverstock Healthcare Ltd, a GP provider organisation, introduced an admission-avoidance system for patients aged 70 or over: the Triage and Rapid Elderly Assessment Team (TREAT).

Objective: to measure the effect of TREAT on LOS and the rate of same-day discharges (an inverse measure of admission rate).

Setting: TREAT was based in the Accident and Emergency (A&E) department of the Royal Free Hospital, London.

Design: a pre- and post-retrospective cohort study comparing the 5,416 emergency geriatric admissions in the 12 months preceding the introduction of TREAT with the 5,370 emergency geriatric admissions in the 12 months following. Emergency geriatric admissions were divided into TREAT-matching and residual (non-matching) cohorts from hospital provider spell records, using the Healthcare Resource Group (HRG), treatment function and patient classification of the TREAT admissions. LOS and same-day discharge rates were measured over the pre- and post-TREAT periods: for the TREAT-matching cohort; for the residual cohort of emergency geriatric admissions; and for all emergency geriatric admissions.

Intervention: TREAT is a system of care combining early Accident and Emergency (A&E)-based senior doctor review, Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment (CGA), therapist assessment and supported discharge; post-discharge supported recovery; and a rapid access geriatric ‘hot-clinic’. TREAT was supported by a post-acute care enablement (PACE) team, providing short-term nursing support immediately following discharge.

Results: TREAT accepted 593 geriatric admissions over a 12-month period, of which 32.04% were discharged on the day of admission. The mean LOS was 4.41 days, and the median LOS was 1 day. After the introduction of TREAT, mean LOS reduced by 18.16% (1.78 days, P < 0.001) for TREAT-matching admissions; by 11.65% (1.13 days, P < 0.001) for all emergency geriatric admissions; and by 1.08% (0.11 days, P = 0.065) for the residual population. Over the same period, the percentage of admissions resulting in same-day discharges increased from 12.26 to 16.23% (OR: 1.386, 95% CI: 1.203–1.597, P < 0.001) for TREAT-matching admissions, but for the residual population fell from 15.01 to 9.77% (OR: 0.613, P < 0.001, 95% CI: 0.737–0.509).

Conclusions: TREAT appears to have reduced avoidable emergency geriatric admissions, and to have shortened LOS for all emergency geriatric admissions. It aims to address the King's Fund's call for an ‘overall system of care rather than lots of discrete processes’ through ‘better design and co-ordination of services following the needs of older people’. The ease of set-up lends itself to replication and testing in clinical and cost-effectiveness studies. Further studies are needed to measure the impact of TREAT on re-admission rates, patient outcomes and satisfaction.

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