A whole system study of intermediate care services for older people.

Category Primary study
JournalAge and ageing
Year 2005
Loading references information

BACKGROUND:

Intermediate care (IC) services have been widely introduced in England and have the strategic objectives of reducing hospital and long-term care use. There is uncertainty about the clinical outcomes of these services and whether their strategic aims will be realised.

SETTING:

A metropolitan city in northern England.

DESIGN:

A quasi-experimental study comparing a group of older people before and after the introduction of an IC service. A quota sampling method was used to match the groups.

SUBJECTS:

Patients presenting as emergency admissions to two elderly care departments with falls, confusion, incontinence or immobility. Intervention: a city-wide service in which a joint care management team (multi-agency, multi-disciplinary) assessed patient need and purchased support and rehabilitation from sector-based IC teams.

OUTCOMES:

Nottingham Extended Activities of Daily Living score, Barthel Index, Hospital Anxiety and Depression score, mortality, readmission to hospital, and new institutional care placement at 3, 6 and 12 months post-recruitment.

RESULTS:

There were 800 and 848 patients, respectively, in the control and intervention groups. Clinical outcomes, hospital and long-term care use were similar between the groups. Uptake of IC was lower than anticipated at 29%. An embedded case-control study comparing the 246 patients who received IC with a matched sample from the control group demonstrated similar clinical outcomes but increased hospital bed days used over 12 months (mean +8 days; 95% CI 3.1-13.0).

CONCLUSION:

This city-wide IC service was associated with similar clinical outcomes but did not achieve its strategic objectives of reducing long-term care and hospital use.
Epistemonikos ID: 9589185eec5c9ea2dbdc64ee321aa2cede326a7b
First added on: Aug 06, 2011