Effect of single follow-up home visit on readmission in a group of frail elderly patients – a Danish randomized clinical trial

Abstract Background Unplanned hospital admissions are costly and prevention of these has been a focus for research for decades. With this study we aimed to determine whether discharge planning including a single follow-up home visit reduces readmission rate. The intervention is not representing a ne...

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Main Authors: Maurice A. Lembeck, Lau C. Thygesen, Birgitte Dreyer Sørensen, Lisbeth Lumby Rasmussen, Ellen A. Holm
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-10-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-019-4528-9
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spelling doaj-3e2355d038d7483f8b8d024eba3b8b292020-11-25T03:10:06ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632019-10-0119111010.1186/s12913-019-4528-9Effect of single follow-up home visit on readmission in a group of frail elderly patients – a Danish randomized clinical trialMaurice A. Lembeck0Lau C. Thygesen1Birgitte Dreyer Sørensen2Lisbeth Lumby Rasmussen3Ellen A. Holm4Department of Internal Medicine, Nykøbing Falster HospitalNational Institute of Public Health, University of Southern DenmarkDepartment of Quality and DevelopmentNykøbing Falster HospitalDepartment of Internal Medicine, Nykøbing Falster HospitalAbstract Background Unplanned hospital admissions are costly and prevention of these has been a focus for research for decades. With this study we aimed to determine whether discharge planning including a single follow-up home visit reduces readmission rate. The intervention is not representing a new method but contributes to the evidence concerning intensity of the intervention in this patient group. Methods This study was a centrally randomized single-center controlled trial comparing intervention to usual care with investigator-blinded outcome assessment. Patients above the age of 65 were discharged from a single Danish hospital during 2013–2014 serving a rural and low socioeconomic area. For intervention patients study and department nurses reviewed discharge planning the day before discharge. On the day of discharge, study nurses accompanied the patient to their home, where they met with the municipal nurse. Together with the patient they reviewed cognitive skills, medicine, nutrition, mobility, functional status, and future appointments in the health care sector and intervened if appropriate. Readmission at any hospital in Denmark within 8, 30, and 180 days after discharge is reported. Secondary outcomes were time to first readmission, number of readmissions, length of stay, and readmission with Ambulatory Care Sensitive Conditions, visits to general practitioners, municipal services, and mortality. Results One thousand forty-nine patients aged > 65 years discharged from medical, geriatric, emergency, surgical or orthopedic departments met inclusion criteria characteristic of frailty, e.g. low functional status, need of more personal help and multiple medications. Among 945 eligible patients, 544 were randomized. Seven patients died before discharge. 56% in the intervention group and 54% in the control group were readmitted (p = 0.71) and 23% from the intervention group and 22% from the control group died within 180 days. There were no significant differences between intervention and control groups concerning other secondary outcomes. Conclusions There was no effect of a single follow-up home visit on readmission in a group of frail elderly patients discharged from hospital. Trial registration https://clinicaltrials.gov (identifier NCT02318680), retrospectively registered December 11, 2014.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-019-4528-9Discharge planningReadmissionFrailtyElderlyClinical trial
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maurice A. Lembeck
Lau C. Thygesen
Birgitte Dreyer Sørensen
Lisbeth Lumby Rasmussen
Ellen A. Holm
spellingShingle Maurice A. Lembeck
Lau C. Thygesen
Birgitte Dreyer Sørensen
Lisbeth Lumby Rasmussen
Ellen A. Holm
Effect of single follow-up home visit on readmission in a group of frail elderly patients – a Danish randomized clinical trial
BMC Health Services Research
Discharge planning
Readmission
Frailty
Elderly
Clinical trial
author_facet Maurice A. Lembeck
Lau C. Thygesen
Birgitte Dreyer Sørensen
Lisbeth Lumby Rasmussen
Ellen A. Holm
author_sort Maurice A. Lembeck
title Effect of single follow-up home visit on readmission in a group of frail elderly patients – a Danish randomized clinical trial
title_short Effect of single follow-up home visit on readmission in a group of frail elderly patients – a Danish randomized clinical trial
title_full Effect of single follow-up home visit on readmission in a group of frail elderly patients – a Danish randomized clinical trial
title_fullStr Effect of single follow-up home visit on readmission in a group of frail elderly patients – a Danish randomized clinical trial
title_full_unstemmed Effect of single follow-up home visit on readmission in a group of frail elderly patients – a Danish randomized clinical trial
title_sort effect of single follow-up home visit on readmission in a group of frail elderly patients – a danish randomized clinical trial
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Abstract Background Unplanned hospital admissions are costly and prevention of these has been a focus for research for decades. With this study we aimed to determine whether discharge planning including a single follow-up home visit reduces readmission rate. The intervention is not representing a new method but contributes to the evidence concerning intensity of the intervention in this patient group. Methods This study was a centrally randomized single-center controlled trial comparing intervention to usual care with investigator-blinded outcome assessment. Patients above the age of 65 were discharged from a single Danish hospital during 2013–2014 serving a rural and low socioeconomic area. For intervention patients study and department nurses reviewed discharge planning the day before discharge. On the day of discharge, study nurses accompanied the patient to their home, where they met with the municipal nurse. Together with the patient they reviewed cognitive skills, medicine, nutrition, mobility, functional status, and future appointments in the health care sector and intervened if appropriate. Readmission at any hospital in Denmark within 8, 30, and 180 days after discharge is reported. Secondary outcomes were time to first readmission, number of readmissions, length of stay, and readmission with Ambulatory Care Sensitive Conditions, visits to general practitioners, municipal services, and mortality. Results One thousand forty-nine patients aged > 65 years discharged from medical, geriatric, emergency, surgical or orthopedic departments met inclusion criteria characteristic of frailty, e.g. low functional status, need of more personal help and multiple medications. Among 945 eligible patients, 544 were randomized. Seven patients died before discharge. 56% in the intervention group and 54% in the control group were readmitted (p = 0.71) and 23% from the intervention group and 22% from the control group died within 180 days. There were no significant differences between intervention and control groups concerning other secondary outcomes. Conclusions There was no effect of a single follow-up home visit on readmission in a group of frail elderly patients discharged from hospital. Trial registration https://clinicaltrials.gov (identifier NCT02318680), retrospectively registered December 11, 2014.
topic Discharge planning
Readmission
Frailty
Elderly
Clinical trial
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-019-4528-9
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