Referral patterns of stroke rehabilitation inpatients to a model system of outpatient services in Ontario, Canada: a 7-year retrospective analysis

Abstract Background While several studies have tracked the care paths of patients in the early phases of stroke recovery, studies examining the transition from inpatient to outpatient rehabilitation are lacking. Examining this transition allows for improved understanding and refinement of the proces...

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Main Authors: Shannon Janzen, Magdalena Mirkowski, Amanda McIntyre, Swati Mehta, Jerome Iruthayarajah, Robert Teasell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-06-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-019-4236-5
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spelling doaj-fdb26ed8a54a47b1b4547e873e91822c2020-11-25T02:25:04ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632019-06-011911910.1186/s12913-019-4236-5Referral patterns of stroke rehabilitation inpatients to a model system of outpatient services in Ontario, Canada: a 7-year retrospective analysisShannon Janzen0Magdalena Mirkowski1Amanda McIntyre2Swati Mehta3Jerome Iruthayarajah4Robert Teasell5Parkwood Institute Research, Lawson Health Research Institute, Parkwood InstituteParkwood Institute Research, Lawson Health Research Institute, Parkwood InstituteParkwood Institute Research, Lawson Health Research Institute, Parkwood InstituteParkwood Institute Research, Lawson Health Research Institute, Parkwood InstituteParkwood Institute Research, Lawson Health Research Institute, Parkwood InstituteParkwood Institute Research, Lawson Health Research Institute, Parkwood InstituteAbstract Background While several studies have tracked the care paths of patients in the early phases of stroke recovery, studies examining the transition from inpatient to outpatient rehabilitation are lacking. Examining this transition allows for improved understanding and refinement of the process whereby patients are referred and admitted to programs. The objective of this study was to examine the referral patterns of stroke rehabilitation inpatients to outpatient stroke therapy services, their demographics, and clinical profile. Methods This study examined patients who: (1) were admitted to an inpatient stroke rehabilitation unit between January 1, 2009 and March 1, 2016, (2) had a stroke diagnosis, (3) had an inpatient length of stay of > 1 day, and (4) lived within the geographical boundaries of the South West Local Health Integration Network which allowed them access to both hospital-based and home-based stroke rehabilitation outpatient programs. Patient data was collected from the National Rehabilitation Reporting System, as well as three hospital outpatient administrative databases. These databases were cross-referenced to determine each patient’s pathway. Those referred to an outpatient therapy program, and those who attended the outpatient programs, were compared to those who were not, and did not, respectively. Results 1497 inpatients were included in the analysis. Upon discharge, 1037 (69.3%) of patients had an outpatient clinic, follow-up appointment scheduled; of those, 902 (87.0%) patients attended at least one outpatient clinic visit. 891 (59.5%) were referred to one of the interdisciplinary outpatient stroke rehabilitation programs; of those, an outpatient therapy program was attended by 80.9% of patients (n = 721). Of those receiving outpatient therapy services, the number of patients attending the in-hospital versus home-based program were equal, 360 and 361 individuals, respectively. Conclusion This study allows for a better understanding of the transition between inpatient and outpatient stroke care. There is a paucity of this type of information in stroke rehabilitation literature to date. This study acts as a starting point in improving rehabilitation planning across the continuum of care.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-019-4236-5StrokeReferral patternsCare pathwaysOutpatient rehabilitationInpatient rehabilitationOutpatient services
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shannon Janzen
Magdalena Mirkowski
Amanda McIntyre
Swati Mehta
Jerome Iruthayarajah
Robert Teasell
spellingShingle Shannon Janzen
Magdalena Mirkowski
Amanda McIntyre
Swati Mehta
Jerome Iruthayarajah
Robert Teasell
Referral patterns of stroke rehabilitation inpatients to a model system of outpatient services in Ontario, Canada: a 7-year retrospective analysis
BMC Health Services Research
Stroke
Referral patterns
Care pathways
Outpatient rehabilitation
Inpatient rehabilitation
Outpatient services
author_facet Shannon Janzen
Magdalena Mirkowski
Amanda McIntyre
Swati Mehta
Jerome Iruthayarajah
Robert Teasell
author_sort Shannon Janzen
title Referral patterns of stroke rehabilitation inpatients to a model system of outpatient services in Ontario, Canada: a 7-year retrospective analysis
title_short Referral patterns of stroke rehabilitation inpatients to a model system of outpatient services in Ontario, Canada: a 7-year retrospective analysis
title_full Referral patterns of stroke rehabilitation inpatients to a model system of outpatient services in Ontario, Canada: a 7-year retrospective analysis
title_fullStr Referral patterns of stroke rehabilitation inpatients to a model system of outpatient services in Ontario, Canada: a 7-year retrospective analysis
title_full_unstemmed Referral patterns of stroke rehabilitation inpatients to a model system of outpatient services in Ontario, Canada: a 7-year retrospective analysis
title_sort referral patterns of stroke rehabilitation inpatients to a model system of outpatient services in ontario, canada: a 7-year retrospective analysis
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Abstract Background While several studies have tracked the care paths of patients in the early phases of stroke recovery, studies examining the transition from inpatient to outpatient rehabilitation are lacking. Examining this transition allows for improved understanding and refinement of the process whereby patients are referred and admitted to programs. The objective of this study was to examine the referral patterns of stroke rehabilitation inpatients to outpatient stroke therapy services, their demographics, and clinical profile. Methods This study examined patients who: (1) were admitted to an inpatient stroke rehabilitation unit between January 1, 2009 and March 1, 2016, (2) had a stroke diagnosis, (3) had an inpatient length of stay of > 1 day, and (4) lived within the geographical boundaries of the South West Local Health Integration Network which allowed them access to both hospital-based and home-based stroke rehabilitation outpatient programs. Patient data was collected from the National Rehabilitation Reporting System, as well as three hospital outpatient administrative databases. These databases were cross-referenced to determine each patient’s pathway. Those referred to an outpatient therapy program, and those who attended the outpatient programs, were compared to those who were not, and did not, respectively. Results 1497 inpatients were included in the analysis. Upon discharge, 1037 (69.3%) of patients had an outpatient clinic, follow-up appointment scheduled; of those, 902 (87.0%) patients attended at least one outpatient clinic visit. 891 (59.5%) were referred to one of the interdisciplinary outpatient stroke rehabilitation programs; of those, an outpatient therapy program was attended by 80.9% of patients (n = 721). Of those receiving outpatient therapy services, the number of patients attending the in-hospital versus home-based program were equal, 360 and 361 individuals, respectively. Conclusion This study allows for a better understanding of the transition between inpatient and outpatient stroke care. There is a paucity of this type of information in stroke rehabilitation literature to date. This study acts as a starting point in improving rehabilitation planning across the continuum of care.
topic Stroke
Referral patterns
Care pathways
Outpatient rehabilitation
Inpatient rehabilitation
Outpatient services
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-019-4236-5
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