家庭护理轨迹-护理使用者的死亡风险概况:一项观察性研究。

IF 1.6 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES International Journal of Population Data Science Pub Date : 2022-08-25 DOI:10.23889/ijpds.v7i3.1847
Maya Murmann, D. Manuel, P. Tanuseputro, C. Bennett, M. Pugliese, Rhiannon Roberts, Wenshan Li, A. Hsu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

respect是一种预后工具,使用相关的基于人群的数据开发,用于预测社区居住的老年人6个月死亡率。RESPECT作为基于web的工具在ProjectBigLife上实现并公开访问。Ca,迄今为止已经进行了70多万次计算。我们的目的是通过RESPECT生成的死亡率风险概况来描述家庭护理(HC)使用者的医疗保健利用模式,为老年人的护理规划提供信息,这些老年人随着年龄的下降有不同的死亡率风险和护理需求水平。方法:我们进行了一项回顾性队列研究,调查了加拿大安大略省HC使用者的医疗保健使用情况,这些使用者在2018年4月至2019年9月期间至少接受了一次rai HC评估。使用个人层面的相关健康管理数据,我们检查了每次评估和使用RESPECT进行预测后6个月内的急性护理(住院和急诊就诊)、长期护理(LTC)和姑息性家庭护理的使用情况。RESPECT的死亡风险概况是基于中位生存期创建的。结果该队列包括247,377名社区居住老年人;14.3%在评估后6个月内死亡。在死者中,半数(51.51%)预期中位生存期小于3个月的HC使用者至少接受过一次姑息治疗家访;分别有39.17%、34.82%和13.84%的患者去急诊科就诊、住院或住院。接受至少一次姑息性HC访问的评估比例分别下降至43.11%和30.28%,中位生存期分别为3至6个月和6至12个月。急性护理使用的评估比例随着中位生存期的增加而增加。结论相当比例的临终患者没有接受任何姑息性家庭护理,而是继续被机构化。这可能表明,许多老年人的预期寿命缩短和姑息治疗需求没有得到认识,从而证明了像RESPECT这样的预后模型的价值,可以为个人生命最后几年的护理计划提供信息。
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Care trajectory in homes care users across mortality-risk profiles: an observational study.
ObjectivesRESPECT is a prognostic tool, developed using linked population-based data, to predict 6-month mortality in community-dwelling older adults. RESPECT is implemented and openly accessible as a web-based tool on ProjectBigLife.ca, where over 700,000 calculations have been performed to date. Our objective was to describe healthcare utilization patterns among home care (HC) users across mortality risk profiles generated from RESPECT to inform care planning for older persons who have varying mortality risks and levels of care needs as they decline. ApproachWe conducted a retrospective cohort study examining healthcare use among HC users in Ontario, Canada, who received at least one interRAI HC assessment between April 2018 and September 2019.  Using linked health administrative data at the individual level, we examined the use of acute care (hospitalizations and emergency department (ED) visits), long-term care (LTC), and palliative home care within 6-months of each assessment and prognostication using RESPECT. Mortality risk profiles from RESPECT were created based on the median survival. ResultsThe cohort comprised 247,377 community-dwelling older adults; 14.3% died within 6-months of an assessment. Among decedents, half (51.51%) of HC users with a predicted median survival of less than 3-months received at least one palliative care home visit; 39.17%, 34.82% and 13.84% visited the ED, were hospitalized, or were admitted to LTC, respectively. The proportion of assessments that received at least one palliative HC visit declined to 43.11% and 30.28% of assessments with a median survival between 3- and 6-months and those between 6-months and 12-months, respectively.  The proportion of assessments with an acute care use increases with increasing median survival. ConclusionA considerable proportion of people at the end-of-life do not receive any palliative home care and continued to be institutionalized. This may be indication that the reduced life expectancies and palliative care needs of many older adults are not being recognized, thus demonstrating the value of prognostic models like RESPECT to inform care planning  for individuals in their final years of life.
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