为急性病患者提供虚拟家庭护理。

IF 10.5 1区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL JAMA Network Open Pub Date : 2024-11-04 DOI:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.47352
Josh Banerjee, Christopher Lynch, Hugh Gordon, Charles E Coffey, Catherine P Canamar, Soodtida Tangpraphaphorn, Karla Gonzalez, Neha Mahajan, Jan Shoenberger, Michael Menchine, Andrew Oh, Emily Johnson, Molly Grassini, Rachel Baden, Paul Holtom, Douglass Hutcheon, Brandon M Wiley, Kusha Davar, Sheila Mallet-Smith, Margaret Sanfratello, Brenda Gallardo, Meixine Song, Nikole Swain, Maria Lydia Solis, Jenny Silva, Charmaine Pablico, Eduardo Aceves, Erica Bonilla, Ria Ashley Legaspi, Deisy M Guevara, Karissa Lee, Christina Martinez, Michelle Banh, Dana Russell, Lissette Cervantes, Jacqueline Cervantes, Cesar Gonzalez, Phillip Sheth, Shadi Dowlatshahi, Alex Rosenberg, Pruthul Patel, Wei-An Lee, Tanzim Khan, Tze-Woei Tan, Michael Fong, Samuel S Gordon, Brandi Clark, Victor Pena, Steven Dohi, Beatrisa Bannister, Roman Villalta, Priya Induru, Pauline Vuong, David Lwe, Karen Stoffel, Sam Oh, Christian Voyageur, Andrew Cool, Yong Lee, Stephen Lenh, Janet Luong, Gary Hanna, Jason N Doctor, Bryan Munoz, Concepcion Castro, Edgar Solis, Nancy Blake, Roza Sakzalyan, Christopher J Rodriguez, Christina Ghaly, Jorge Orozco, Hal F Yee, Brad Spellberg
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引用次数: 0

摘要

重要性:临床护理和远程监控的最新发展表明,一些急性病不再需要静脉注射治疗和住院治疗:描述在一种名为 Safer@Home.Design 的新型门诊虚拟家庭急症护理模式中接受护理的患者的治疗效果、环境和参与者:这项回顾性队列分析从 2022 年 9 月 1 日开始,至 2023 年 8 月 31 日结束,其中包括在洛杉矶县一家安全网医院接受治疗的 2466 名患者,这些患者通常因 10 种核心疾病和 24 种其他急性病住院治疗:门诊、居家、急症护理,以虚拟监控和门诊访问代替住院或居家护理:主要衡量标准是住院时间。次要指标包括全因死亡率、30 天再入院率、紧急护理回访率和急诊科(ED)回访率:在研究期间,Safer@Home 为 876 名患者(平均 [SD] 年龄为 54.0 [14.5] 岁;541 名男性 [61.8%])提供了护理服务,相比之下,1590 名患者(平均 [SD] 年龄为 52.3 [19.6] 岁;901 名男性 [56.7%])的诊断与接受标准医院护理的患者一致。与对比组相比,"更安全在家 "患者的平均(标清)住院时间明显更短(1.3 [2.0] 天 vs 5.3 [10.4] 天;P 结论及意义:在这项队列研究中,与接受标准住院治疗的患者相比,接受远程监控和紧急护理回访的急性虚拟家庭护理的患者住院时间明显缩短,死亡率、急诊室复诊率或再次住院率也没有显著增加。对于无法配备符合医疗保险标准的医院上门服务人员的系统来说,这种新的护理模式大有可为。
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Virtual Home Care for Patients With Acute Illness.

Importance: Recent evolutions in clinical care and remote monitoring suggest that some acute illnesses no longer require intravenous therapy and inpatient hospitalization.

Objective: To describe outcomes of patients receiving care in a new, outpatient, virtual, home-based acute care model called Safer@Home.

Design, setting, and participants: This retrospective cohort analysis, conducted from September 1, 2022, through August 31, 2023, included 2466 patients treated at a safety net hospital in Los Angeles County for 10 core illnesses and 24 other acute illnesses for which patients are commonly hospitalized.

Exposure: Outpatient, home-based, acute care with virtual monitoring and clinic visits in lieu of inpatient or in-home care.

Main outcomes and measures: The primary measure was hospital length of stay. Secondary measures included all-cause mortality, 30-day readmission, return urgent care visit rates, and return emergency department (ED) visit rates.

Results: Safer@Home provided care to 876 patients (mean [SD] age, 54.0 [14.5] years; 541 men [61.8%]) during the study period, compared with a cohort of 1590 patients (mean [SD] age, 52.3 [19.6] years; 901 men [56.7%]) with matching diagnoses who received standard, hospital-based care. Safer@Home patients had significantly shorter mean (SD) lengths of inpatient stay than the comparison cohort (1.3 [2.0] vs 5.3 [10.4] days; P < .001), totaling 3505 bed-days avoided (mean [SD], 4.0 [10.6] bed-days saved per patient), with no significant difference in all-cause mortality at last follow-up (2.6% [23 of 876] vs 4.0% [64 of 1590]; P = .07). Safer@Home patients and control patients also had no significant difference in the proportion experiencing 30-day hospital readmission (19.9% [174 of 876] vs 16.7% [266 of 1590]; P = .06). As intended, more Safer@Home than control patients had at least one 30-day return urgent care visit (37.3% [327 of 876] vs 5.2% [82 of 1590]; P < .001). In contrast, the Safer@Home and control cohorts did not significantly differ in experiencing at least one 30-day return ED visit (15.2% [133 of 876] vs 12.5% [199 of 1590]; P = .06). Safer@Home patients had significantly fewer mean (SD) total 30-day return ED visits per patient than control patients (0.19 [0.50] vs 0.21 [0.85]; P < .001).

Conclusions and relevance: In this cohort study, patients receiving acute, virtual, home care with remote monitoring and as-needed return urgent care visits had markedly shorter hospital stays than patients receiving standard inpatient hospital care, with no significant increase in mortality, ED revisits, or return hospitalizations. This new care model is promising for systems that cannot staff Medicare-compliant hospital-at-home visits.

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来源期刊
JAMA Network Open
JAMA Network Open Medicine-General Medicine
CiteScore
16.00
自引率
2.90%
发文量
2126
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: JAMA Network Open, a member of the esteemed JAMA Network, stands as an international, peer-reviewed, open-access general medical journal.The publication is dedicated to disseminating research across various health disciplines and countries, encompassing clinical care, innovation in health care, health policy, and global health. JAMA Network Open caters to clinicians, investigators, and policymakers, providing a platform for valuable insights and advancements in the medical field. As part of the JAMA Network, a consortium of peer-reviewed general medical and specialty publications, JAMA Network Open contributes to the collective knowledge and understanding within the medical community.
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