Setting Standards in Residential Aged Care: Identifying Achievable Benchmarks of Care for Long-term Aged Care Services.

IF 2.7 4区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES International Journal for Quality in Health Care Pub Date : 2024-11-19 DOI:10.1093/intqhc/mzae105
Johannes Schwabe, Gillian E Caughey, Robert Jorissen, Tracy Comans, Len Gray, Johanna Westbrook, Jeffrey Braithwaite, Peter Hibbert, Steven Wesselingh, Janet K Sluggett, Nasir Wabe, Maria C Inacio
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Abstract

Background: Benchmarks are an important aspect of quality measurement and evaluation of long-term care services (LTCS) performance. In this study, we aimed to estimate achievable benchmarks of care (ABC©) for 12 quality indicators used to monitor quality of care in Australian LTCS and to identify LTCS characteristics associated with attaining the estimated ABC.

Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted using integrated population-based datasets from long-term care, health care, and social welfare sectors within the Registry of Senior Australians (ROSA) National Historical Cohort. All LTCS residents in 2019 were included. Twelve risk-adjusted quality indicators were examined. ABC were defined as the performance level of top-ranked LTCS, including those sequentially from rank 1 onward, until the combined number of residents included at least 10% of all residents nationally. Indicator-specific ABC for 2019 were estimated using Bayesian-adjusted performance fraction ranking. Logistic regressions estimated LCTS characteristics associated with ABC attainment.

Results: 2746 LTCS and 244,419 residents (≥65 years) between 01/01/2019 and 31/12/2019 were included. The cohort was mostly female (65%), with a median age of 86 years, and 56% had dementia. The ABC provide performance targets based on the observed levels of top-performing LTCS. The ABC for premature mortality (0.007%), weight loss hospitalisations (0.1%), pressure injuries (0.2%), delirium and dementia hospitalisations (0.3%), and medication-related adverse events (0.4%) were lower than 1% and attained by 17-59% of LTCS. The ABC for fractures (1.3%), falls (4.0%), and emergency department presentations (5.1%) were between 1-5% and attained by 7-11% of LTCS. The ABC for antipsychotic use (10.7%), chronic opioid use (23.6%), high sedative load exposure (27.4%), and antibiotic use (47.8%) were between 10-50% and met by 6-7% of LTCS. Smaller LTCS and government-owned LTCS were more likely to achieve the ABC compared to medium, larger, private, and not-for-profit LTCS.

Conclusion: This is the first national estimation of ABC for Australian LTCS, identifying real-world examples of LTCS with relatively better national performance. The ABC are realistic goals for LTCS improvement efforts. They can be leveraged as national standards in quality monitoring reports and incentive programs. Smaller and government LTCS were generally more likely to attain ABC.

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制定养老院护理标准:确定可实现的长期养老服务护理基准》(Setting Standards in Residential Aged Care: Identifying Achievable Benchmarks of Care for Long-term Aged Care Services)。
背景:基准是长期护理服务(LTCS)质量衡量和绩效评估的一个重要方面。在这项研究中,我们旨在估算用于监测澳大利亚长期护理服务质量的 12 项质量指标的可实现护理基准(ABC©),并确定与实现估算的 ABC 相关的长期护理服务特征:利用澳大利亚老年人登记处(ROSA)国家历史队列中的长期护理、医疗保健和社会福利部门的综合人口数据集开展了一项横断面研究。纳入了 2019 年的所有长期护理服务居民。研究了 12 项风险调整后的质量指标。ABC被定义为排名靠前的LTCS的绩效水平,包括从排名1起依次递增的LTCS,直到居民总数至少占全国居民总数的10%。使用贝叶斯调整后的绩效分数排名估算了2019年特定指标的ABC。结果:纳入了 2019 年 1 月 1 日至 2019 年 12 月 31 日期间的 2746 家 LTCS 和 244419 名居民(≥65 岁)。其中大部分为女性(65%),年龄中位数为 86 岁,56% 患有痴呆症。ABC 根据观察到的表现最佳的 LTCS 水平提供了绩效目标。过早死亡率(0.007%)、体重减轻住院率(0.1%)、压伤(0.2%)、谵妄和痴呆住院率(0.3%)以及药物相关不良事件(0.4%)的ABC均低于1%,17%-59%的长期护理服务机构达到了这一水平。骨折(1.3%)、跌倒(4.0%)和到急诊室就诊(5.1%)的 ABC 值介于 1-5% 之间,有 7-11% 的 LTCS 达到了这一水平。使用抗精神病药物(10.7%)、长期使用阿片类药物(23.6%)、接触大量镇静剂(27.4%)和使用抗生素(47.8%)的 ABC 值介于 10-50% 之间,有 6-7% 的 LTCS 达到了这一指标。与中型、大型、私立和非营利性 LTCS 相比,小型 LTCS 和政府所有的 LTCS 更有可能达到 ABC 标准:这是首次在全国范围内对澳大利亚长期护理服务的ABC进行评估,找出了现实世界中全国表现相对较好的长期护理服务案例。ABC 是改善 LTCS 工作的现实目标。它们可以在质量监测报告和激励计划中作为国家标准加以利用。一般来说,规模较小的政府长期护理服务机构更有可能达到 ABC 标准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
3.80%
发文量
87
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Journal for Quality in Health Care makes activities and research related to quality and safety in health care available to a worldwide readership. The Journal publishes papers in all disciplines related to the quality and safety of health care, including health services research, health care evaluation, technology assessment, health economics, utilization review, cost containment, and nursing care research, as well as clinical research related to quality of care. This peer-reviewed journal is truly interdisciplinary and includes contributions from representatives of all health professions such as doctors, nurses, quality assurance professionals, managers, politicians, social workers, and therapists, as well as researchers from health-related backgrounds.
期刊最新文献
Exploring the Development of Safety Culture among Physicians with Text Mining of Patient Safety Reports: A Retrospective Study. Optimizing Neurosurgery Clinic Operations: A Comparative Study of Interventions in Finland's Public Healthcare System. Setting Standards in Residential Aged Care: Identifying Achievable Benchmarks of Care for Long-term Aged Care Services. The Influence Mechanism Analysis of Family Doctor Team Effectiveness: A Mixed-method Approach. Developing a Patient-Centered Computerized Clinical Decision Support System with Patient-Level Outcome Measures.
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