1. Elevating care: assessing the impact of telemonitoring on diabetes management at a cutting-edge quaternary hospital
- Author
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Tatianna Pinheiro da Costa Rozzino, Thalita Barreira Modena Cardim, Claudia Regina Laselva, Carolina de Lima Pires, Carolina Muriel Pongillo Mendonça, and Milena Siciliano Nascimento
- Subjects
Telemonitoring ,Patient readmission ,Adult ,Diabetes mellitus ,Hyperglycemia ,Patient discharge ,Length of stay ,Hospitalization ,Medicine - Abstract
ABSTRACT Objective: To assess whether post-discharge telemonitoring reduces hospital readmission in patients participating in the diabetes care program. Methods: This retrospective cohort study was conducted from June 2021 to December 2022 and included patients who were enrolled in the Diabetes Program under a hyperglycemia treatment protocol and eligible for post-discharge telemonitoring. The variables included age, sex, diagnosis, hospital stay, LACE Score, and readmission rate. Results: Among 165 patients who underwent telemonitoring, significant differences emerged in hospital readmission rates between those with and without telemonitoring (p=0.015), with a 15.4% lower readmission rate in the telemonitoring group (95%CI= 3.0-27.9%). Subgroup analyses revealed higher readmission rates in men without telemonitoring (15.2% difference; 95%CI= 0.4-30.0%; p=0.045), and in age groups ≤60 and ≥75 years without telemonitoring (24.2% difference; 95%CI= 4.5-43.9%; p=0.016 for ≤60 years; 37.1% difference; 95%CI= 9.9% to 64.2%; p=0.007 for ≥75 years). Additionally, patients with prolonged hospital stays (>7 days) without telemonitoring had higher readmission rates (19.5% difference; 95%CI= 4.5%-34.5%; p=0.011). Conclusion: This study suggests that post-discharge telemonitoring can effectively lower hospital readmission rates in diabetes management programs, potentially offering improved health outcomes, cost savings, and enhanced healthcare delivery to patients.
- Published
- 2024
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