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Quality improvement outcomes from the introduction of a geriatrician into a rehabilitation setting

Authors :
Samir K. Sinha
Sabrina R. Fitzgerald
Richard Norman
Lindy Romanovsky
Source :
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society. 69:2648-2658
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Objectives Geriatrician impact on patient and system outcomes in formal rehabilitation settings has not been well described to date. We studied the effect of adding a geriatric medicine consultation service to a geriatric focused rehabilitation setting providing care to dialysis and non-dialysis patients. Design/setting/participants A pre- and post-retrospective observational cohort study from January 1, 2009 to June 30, 2019 on all consecutively admitted adults aged 65 and older to general rehabilitation program, and adults aged 60 and older to specialized dialysis rehabilitation program, within a 25 bed general rehabilitation unit in a large urban academic rehabilitation center in Toronto, Ontario. Data were analyzed with quality improvement methodology including Statistical Process Control charts (XmR and U charts). Intervention Addition of a geriatric medicine service providing automatic comprehensive geriatric assessment and co-management consultative services for all admitted patients from admission onwards who met criteria for the intervention. The intervention commenced on August 1, 2013. Measurements Outcome measures were length of stay (days), service interruption frequency, and average functional independence measure (FIM) change (discharge FIM minus admission FIM) which uses the validated FIM score, a marker of functional ability. A 22 point change in FIM score is clinically relevant. Results Patient characteristics: general rehabilitation patients (n = 1395, mean age = 79.7, 50.1% female) and dialysis rehabilitation patients (n = 838, mean age = 72.8, 41.8% female). The average FIM change following intervention improved from 20.8 to 29.3 in the general rehabilitation cohort (40.6% improvement, SD = 5.51) and from 22.1 to 30.6 in the dialysis rehabilitation cohort (38.6% improvement, SD = 5.88). Changes in length of stay (24.9%-28.1% reduction) and service interruption frequency (34.3%-49.7% reduction) were also observed. Conclusion Introduction of a geriatric medicine service for rehabilitation inpatients was associated with significant FIM score improvements. Our results suggest this intervention contributes to important gains in functional independence in reduced time for older adults receiving inpatient rehabilitative care.

Details

ISSN :
15325415 and 00028614
Volume :
69
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c9e7ce369dbc11c1021be8e25f0a1bd0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jgs.17297