Optimizing Hospital-to-Home Transitions for Older Adults With Stroke and Multimorbidity

Author(s):  
2014 ◽  
Vol 62 (8) ◽  
pp. 1556-1561 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Ryan Greysen ◽  
Doug Hoi-Cheung ◽  
Veronica Garcia ◽  
Eric Kessell ◽  
Urmimala Sarkar ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolyn Steele Gray ◽  
Terence Tang ◽  
Alana Armas ◽  
Mira Backo-Shannon ◽  
Sarah Harvey ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND Older adults with multimorbidity and complex care needs (CCN) are among those most likely to experience frequent care transitions between settings, particularly from hospital to home. Transition periods mark vulnerable moments in care for individuals with CCN. Poor communication and incomplete information transfer between clinicians and organizations involved in the transition from hospital to home can impede access to needed support and resources. Establishing digitally supported communication that enables person-centered care and supported self-management may offer significant advantages as we support older adults with CCN transitioning from hospital to home. OBJECTIVE This protocol outlines the plan for the development, implementation, and evaluation of a Digital Bridge co-designed to support person-centered health care transitions for older adults with CCN. The Digital Bridge builds on the foundation of two validated technologies: Care Connector, designed to improve interprofessional communication in hospital, and the electronic Patient-Reported Outcomes (ePRO) tool, designed to support goal-oriented care planning and self-management in primary care settings. This project poses three overarching research questions that focus on adapting the technology to local contexts, evaluating the impact of the Digital Bridge in relation to the quadruple aim, and exploring the potential to scale and spread the technology. METHODS The study includes two phases: workflow co-design (phase 1), followed by implementation and evaluation (phase 2). Phase 1 will include iterative co-design working groups with patients, caregivers, hospital providers, and primary care providers to develop a transition workflow that will leverage the use of Care Connector and ePRO to support communication through the transition process. Phase 2 will include implementation and evaluation of the Digital Bridge within two hospital systems in Ontario in acute and rehab settings (600 patients: 300 baseline and 300 implementation). The primary outcome measure for this study is the Care Transitions Measure–3 to assess transition quality. An embedded ethnography will be included to capture context and process data to inform the implementation assessment and development of a scale and spread strategy. An Integrated Knowledge Translation approach is taken to inform the study. An advisory group will be established to provide insight and feedback regarding the project design and implementation, leading the development of the project knowledge translation strategy and associated outputs. RESULTS This project is underway and expected to be complete by Spring 2024. CONCLUSIONS Given the real-world implementation of Digital Bridge, practice changes in the research sites and variable adherence to the implementation protocols are likely. Capturing and understanding these considerations through a mixed-methods approach will help identify the range of factors that may influence study results. Should a favorable evaluation suggest wide adoption of the proposed intervention, this project could lead to positive impact at patient, clinician, organizational, and health system levels. CLINICALTRIAL ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04287192; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04287192 INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT PRR1-10.2196/20220


2021 ◽  
pp. 084456212110443
Author(s):  
Brittany Barber ◽  
Lori Weeks ◽  
Lexie Steeves-Dorey ◽  
Wendy McVeigh ◽  
Susan Stevens ◽  
...  

Background An increasing proportion of older adults experience avoidable hospitalizations, and some are potentially entering long-term care homes earlier and often unnecessarily. Older adults often lack adequate support to transition from hospital to home, without access to appropriate health services when they are needed in the community and resources to live safely at home. Purpose This study collaborated with an existing enhanced home care program called Home Again in Nova Scotia, to identify factors that contribute to older adult patients being assessed as requiring long-term care when they could potentially return home with enhanced supports. Methods Using a case study design, this study examined in-depth experiences of multiple stakeholders, from December 2019 to February 2020, through analysis of nine interviews for three focal patient cases including older adult patients, their family or friend caregivers, and healthcare professionals. Results Findings indicate home care services for older adults are being sought too late, after hospital readmission, or a rapid decline in health status when family caregivers are already experiencing caregiver burnout. Limitations in home care services led to barriers preventing family caregivers from continuing to care for older adults at home. Conclusions This study contributes knowledge about gaps within home care and transitional care services, highlighting the importance of investing in additional home care services for rehabilitation and prevention of rapidly deteriorating health.


2018 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 303-314 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicole E Werner ◽  
Michelle Tong ◽  
Amy Borkenhagen ◽  
Richard J Holden

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S711-S711
Author(s):  
Kathryn Anzuoni ◽  
Terry Field ◽  
Kathleen Mazor ◽  
Yanhua Zhou ◽  
Timothy Konola ◽  
...  

Abstract For older adults, the transition from hospital to home is a high-risk period for adverse drug events, functional decline, and hospital readmission. Randomized trials of interventions to improve this transition must recruit potential subjects immediately after hospital discharge, when people are recovering and tired. Within a randomized trial assessing the impact of a pharmacist home visit to provide medication assistance immediately post-discharge, we determined whether individuals who enrolled were comparable to those who were invited but did not enroll, and described reasons for not enrolling. Individuals ≥50 years of age discharged from the hospital and prescribed a high-risk medication were eligible. We attempted to recruit individuals by phone within 3 days of discharge, and recorded reasons for not enrolling. Of 3,606 eligible individuals reached, 3,147 (87%) declined, 361 (10%) were enrolled, and 98 (3%) were initially recruited but did not complete a consent form. Individuals ≥80 years of age (odds ratio 0.45, CI 0.25, 0.78) and those with an assigned visiting nurse (odds ratio 0.64, CI 0.48, 0.85) were least likely to enroll. Among those who provided a reason for declining (2,473) the most common reason given was the belief they did not need medication assistance (22%). An additional 332 (13%) declined because they were receiving visiting nurse services. Recruiting older adults recently discharged from the hospital is difficult and may under-enroll the oldest individuals, limiting the ability to generalize findings across older patient populations. Researchers planning RCTs among newly discharged older adults may need creative approaches to overcome resistance.


Author(s):  
Cristina Hendrix ◽  
Sara Tepfer ◽  
Sabrina Forest ◽  
Karen Ziegler ◽  
Valerie Fox ◽  
...  

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