|
E-mail this page to a friend!
'Hospital at Home' for Seniors Offers Quality Care
at Less Cost Says Study
Dec. 15, 2005 - Being hospitalized can be a
traumatic experience, especially for older persons. Hospitals are noisy,
disorienting, full of strangers and infections often spread among
patients.
| |
Related Stories |
|
| |
States Finding Ways to Keep Elderly Out of Nursing
Homes
Dec. 13, 2005 Poll after poll has shown senior
citizens would prefer to stay in their homes after becoming disabled
rather than move to nursing homes. Studies have also shown it is less
costly for Medicaid, which pays for the care of most nursing home
patients, if the needs of these citizens can be provided by home health
care. So, finding ways to care for the elderly in their homes is a
win-win situation but cutting through the red tape is a challenge.
Christine Vestal reports in a recent story for Stateline.org, however,
that state governments are finding ways to achieve this goal.
Read more...
Thirteen Million Baby Boomers Care for Ailing
Parents, 25% Live with Parents
Discrepancies about how parents and boomers remember
caregiver role points to complex relationship
Oct. 19, 2005 - Thirteen million of the nation's
baby boomers are caregivers of sick parents and deeply involved in every
facet of their parents' care, from diagnosis to treatment, according to
a 2005 survey from Campbell-Ewald Health. Interestingly, the senior
citizen parents do not remember much of that help.
Read more...
HHS Gives $28.5 Million
in 17 States to Help Disabled Stay at Home
Sept. 27, 2005 Health
and Human Services today announced $28.5 million in grants to
organizations in 17 states that are to help people of all ages with
disabilities or long-term illness live in their homes and participate
fully in community life. There are about 54 million Americans with such
disability. Read
more...
Widowed Elders Have Less Stress Living Close to
Children - Not Too Close
Aug. 16, 2005 - Living near your children enhances
psychological well-being, but widowed elderly living with children may
find that their social life suffers, a new University of Michigan study
showed. Read more...
Long-Term Care Spurs Strong Recommendations from
White House Conference Group
White House Conference on Aging's Long-Term Care
Mini-Conference issues final report
By Tucker Sutherland, editor
Aug. 11, 2005 Frankly, I was skeptical of any
meaningful recommendations coming from the White House Conference on
Aging's Long-Term Care Mini-Conference held last April, because many of
those who organized and financed it were companies and organizations
with a vested interest particularly in selling insurance for long-term
care. The final report was released today and I have to admit I was
wrong. It
is
a frank and strong call for action by government and the
private sector in meeting the long-term care crisis in America.
Read more...
Nursing Home Residents Decline as Assisted Living,
In-Home Care Boom
Aug. 6, 2005
Read more...
Read more on Elder Care - click |
|
Now a new study has shown that for older persons
with certain acute conditions, hospital-level care can be provided at
home for less money and with fewer clinical complications than
in-hospital care.
In addition, patients recovered sooner when
"hospitalized" at home, the study found, and they and their families
were more satisfied with the whole experience.
The program, called Hospital at Home, was carried
out by the University at Buffalo, Yale University and Oregon Health and
Science University. Bruce Leff, M.D., from The Johns Hopkins University,
oversaw the project.
Results of the program appear in the current issue
(Dec. 6) of Annals of Internal Medicine.
The program in Buffalo was a collaboration among
four institutions -- UB, Kaleida Health, Independent Health and Univera.
"The success of our collaboration provides a model
for establishing home hospital programs within communities with multiple
competing health-care organizations," said Bruce Naughton, M.D.,
principal investigator on the Buffalo project and director of the UB
Division of Geriatrics.
"Work is continuing in Buffalo with the goal of
establishing a sustainable home hospital program," added Naughton,
associate professor of medicine at UB.
The program was carried out in two consecutive
11-month phases. All patient participants came to a hospital suffering
from one of four target illnesses: community-acquired pneumonia,
exacerbation of chronic heart failure, exacerbation of chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease or cellulitis.
The first phase -- which included 60 patients in
Buffalo -- took place in participating hospitals. In this phase, 282
persons who met the study criteria, consented to participate and to
allow a review of their records served as the "hospital observation
comparison group." Through interviews and review of medical records, a
study coordinator collected information on the seriousness of illness,
health status, medications used, laboratory results, type and course of
treatment, complications, and outcomes, and determined if the care met
treatment standards.
In addition, a family member or person who knew the
patient well was interviewed to determine the patient's dementia
experience. Patients and family members were contacted two weeks after
discharge to obtain information on the patient's ability to function and
satisfaction with care.
In the second, or intervention, phase -- which
included 30 participants in Buffalo -- patients who came to the hospital
for admission for the target illnesses were evaluated in the emergency
department and given the option of being admitted or taking part in the
Hospital at Home project. Sixty-percent of eligible patients opted for
Hospital at Home. They were taken home by ambulance, and met there by a
nurse. Hospital-equivalent treatment -- medications, electrocardiograms,
X-rays, intravenous fluids and medications, oxygen and respirators --
was provided in the home setting.
The nurse stayed with the patient for 8-to-24 hours
initially, depending on the protocol of the project site, and then
visited at least once a day until "discharge." The Hospital at Home
physician made daily visits and was available 24 hours a day for
emergencies. When the patient was ready for discharge, care reverted to
the primary care physician.
Extensive evaluation of the process of care and
treatment outcomes in both settings showed that, in addition to the fact
that the majority of patients chose Hospital at Home when given the
choice, care in that setting was timely and of high quality.
Substituting at-home care entirely for hospital care resulted in fewer
important clinical complications including delirium, greater
satisfaction and lower total costs, the analysis showed.
Naughton noted that this home treatment program
differs from other community-based treatment plans in several respects:
extensive physician involvement and one-on-one nursing care (for an
average of nearly 17 hours per patient); intensive medical services,
including providing oxygen and intravenous therapy, which were excluded
in previous studies of in-home care; and in-depth analysis of a wide
range of outcomes, including clinical, patient and family satisfaction,
patient function, delirium experiences and costs.
"Our experience with home-hospital and similar
programs gives Western New York the opportunity to develop innovative
health-care services for its aging population," Naughton said. "There
are alternatives to hospitalization for older adults that can increase
patient safety and reduce costs."
The study was funded by a grant from the John A.
Hartford Foundation.
The University at Buffalo is a premier
research-intensive public university, the largest and most comprehensive
campus in the State University of New York.
|
Nursing Home Abuse, Medical Malpractice? Contact a lawyer.
click here
|
|
|
Click here to Search SeniorJournal.com for more on
this subject
Click to More Senior News on the
Front Page
Copyright: SeniorJournal.com |