Reducing Hospital Transfers from Aged Care Facilities: A Large-Scale Stepped Wedge Evaluation

Title
Reducing Hospital Transfers from Aged Care Facilities: A Large-Scale Stepped Wedge Evaluation
Publication Date
2021-01
Author(s)
Hullick, Carolyn J
Hall, Alix E
Conway, Jane F
Hewitt, Jacqueline M
Darcy, Leigh F
Barker, Roslyn T
Oldmeadow, Christopher
Attia, John R
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc
Place of publication
United States of America
DOI
10.1111/jgs.16890
UNE publication id
une:1959.11/63593
Abstract

BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Older people living in residential aged care facilities (RACFs) experience acute deterioration requiring assessment and decision making. We evaluated the impact of a large-scale regional Aged Care Emergency (ACE) program in reducing hospital admissions and emergency department (ED) transfers.

DESIGN: A stepped wedge nonrandomized cluster trial with 11 steps, implemented from May 2013 to August 2016.

SETTING: A large regional and rural area of northern and western New South Wales, Australia.

PARTICIPANTS: Nine hospital EDs and 81 RACFs participated in the evaluation.

INTERVENTION: The ACE program is an integrated nurse-led intervention underpinned by a community of practice designed to improve the capability of RACFs man-aging acutely unwell residents. It includes telephone support, evidence-based algorithms, defining goals of care for ED transfer, case management in the ED, and an education program.

MEASUREMENTS: ED transfers and subsequent hospital admissions were collected from administrative data including 13 months baseline and 9 months follow-up.

RESULTS: A total of 18,837 eligible ED visits were analyzed. After accounting for clustering by RACFs and adjusting for time of the year as well as RACF characteristics, a statistically significant reduction in hospital admissions (adjusted incident rate ratio = .79" 95% confidence interval [CI] = .68–.92)" P = .0025) was seen (i.e., residents were 21% less likely to be admitted to the hospital). This was also observed in ED visit rates (adjusted incidence rate ratio = .80" 95% CI = .69–.92" P = .0023) (i.e., residents were 20% less likely to be transferred to the ED). Seven-day ED re-presentation fell from 5.7% to 4.9%, and30-day hospital readmissions fell from 12% to 10%.

CONCLUSION: The stepped wedge design allowed rigorous evaluation of a real-world large-scale intervention. These results confirm that the ACE program can be scaled up to a large geographic area and can reduce ED visits and hospitalization of older people with complex healthcare needs living in RACFs.

Link
Citation
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 69(1), p. 201-209
ISSN
1532-5415
0002-8614
Start page
201
End page
209

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