1. Health-related outcomes 6 months after integrated care of older people with stroke in 2 different primary care settings.
- Author
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Feng, Xuehuan, Deng, Aiwen, Chen, Jianhao, and Xiong, Ribo
- Subjects
INTEGRATIVE medicine ,STROKE ,PRIMARY care ,CARE of people ,CAREGIVERS - Abstract
Background Integrated care has been proven to be effective among stroke survivors. However, in China, these services mainly focus on connecting the healthcare system (acute, primary medical, and skilled) at the individual level. Closer health and social care integration is a new concept. Objective This study aimed to compare health-related outcomes 6 months after the implementation of the 2 integrated care models. Methods It was a 6-month follow-up of an open, prospectively study comparing the outcomes of a model of integrated health and social care (IHSC) versus a usual integrated healthcare (IHC) model. Outcomes were measured by Short-Form Health Survey-36 (SF-36), Modified Barthel Index (MBI), and Caregiver Strain Index (CSI) at 3 and 6 months, respectively. Results There were no statistically significant differences in MBI scores between patients in the 2 models either after 3 months or at the end of intervention. The same trend was not seen in Physical Components Summary, an integral component of SF-36. Patients in IHSC model scored statistically significant higher points in Mental Components Summary, another integral part of SF-36 than patients in IHC model after 6 months. Average scores of CSI were statistically significant lower for IHSC model than for IHC model after 6 months. Conclusion The findings suggest the need to improve the scales of integration and recognize the vital role played by social care services when designing or improving an integrated care for older people with stroke. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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