痴呆和其他条件的编码不足表明了改善患者管理的范围:澳大利亚痴呆患者的纵向回顾性研究。

Kara Cappetta, Luise Lago, Jan Potter, Lyn Phillipson
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引用次数: 10

摘要

背景:住院期间痴呆的编码不足导致无法使用医院管理数据识别所有痴呆患者。临床编码可被视为管理的代理;因此,编码不足表明痴呆在患者的管理中没有被考虑。虽然痴呆症的低编码已经确立,但在已知诊断的患者随后的住院治疗中,痴呆症是否被编码的证据很少。目的:(a)描述首次痴呆编码(即索引)入院后5年内的痴呆编码模式;(b)确定与痴呆临床编码相关的因素;(c)确定有可能未被编码的患者亚组,以便为未来的干预措施提供信息,以改善医院对痴呆症的识别和管理。方法:回顾性研究2006年7月1日至2015年6月30日在澳大利亚新南威尔士州一个地方卫生区住院的7919例痴呆患者的纵向医院数据。结果:在痴呆指数入院后的12个月内,63.9%的入院者被编码为痴呆;5年后下降到53.7%。当痴呆与谵妄同时发生时,患者得到积极治疗的可能性要高20%。不同情况下的低编码有所不同,痴呆症更有可能被编码为跌倒和肺炎,而心力衰竭、肺炎和尿路感染(UTI)的可能性较小。结论:痴呆症未编码的频率突出了通过痴呆症特异性护理、强化临床方案和针对心力衰竭、肺炎和尿路感染入院的干预措施来改善痴呆症识别和管理的机会。
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Under-coding of dementia and other conditions indicates scope for improved patient management: A longitudinal retrospective study of dementia patients in Australia.

Background: Under-coding of dementia during hospitalisation results in an inability to identify all patients with dementia using hospital administrative data. Clinical coding can be viewed as a proxy for management; therefore, under-coding indicates dementia was not considered in the patient's management. While under-coding of dementia is well established, there is sparse evidence on whether dementia is coded in subsequent hospitalisations among patients with a known diagnosis.

Objective: (a) To describe patterns of dementia coding over 5 years after a first-coded (i.e. index) admission for dementia; (b) to identify factors associated with clinical coding of dementia; and (c) to identify patient subgroups at risk of not being coded to inform future interventions to improve hospital identification and management of dementia.

Method: Retrospective study of longitudinal hospital data from 1 July 2006 to 30 June 2015 for 7919 patients hospitalised during the 5 years' post-index admission for dementia in a regional local health district of New South Wales, Australia.

Results: Dementia was coded in 63.9% of admissions in the 12 months following index admission for dementia; this decreased to 53.7% after 5 years. Patients were 20% more likely to have dementia actively managed when it co-occurred with delirium. Under-coding varied across conditions, with dementia more likely to be coded in admissions for falls and pneumonitis, and less likely for heart failure, pneumonia and urinary tract infection (UTI).

Conclusion: The frequency with which dementia was not coded highlights opportunities to improve identification and management of dementia through dementia-specific care, enhanced clinical protocols, and interventions focused around heart failure, pneumonia and UTI admissions.

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