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Nursing Home Resident Admission Characteristics and Potentially Preventable Emergency Department Transfers

Authors :
Komal Aryal
Fabrice Mowbray
Andrea Gruneir
Lauren E. Griffith
Michelle Howard
Amina Jabbar
Aaron Jones
Peter Tanuseputro
Lauren Lapointe-Shaw
Andrew P. Costa
Source :
Journal of the American Medical Directors Association. 23:1291-1296
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

To determine which nursing home (NH) resident-level admission characteristics are associated with potentially preventable emergency department (PPED) transfers.We conducted a population-level retrospective cohort study on NH resident data collected using the Resident Assessment Instrument-Minimum Data Set Version 2.0 and linked to the National Ambulatory Care Reporting System for ED transfers.We used all NH resident admission assessments from January 1, 2017, to December 31, 2018, in Ontario.The cohort included the admission assessment of 56,433 NH residents.PPED transfers were defined based on the International Classification of Disease, Version 10 (Canadian) We used logistic regression with 10-fold cross-validation and computed average marginal effects to identify the association between resident characteristics at NH admission and PPED transfers within 92 days after admission.Overall, 6.2% of residents had at least 1 PPED transfer within 92 days of NH admission. After adjustment, variables that had a prevalence of 10% or more that were associated with a 1% or more absolute increase in the risk of a PPED transfer included polypharmacy [of cohort (OC) 84.4%, risk difference (RD) 2.0%], congestive heart failure (OC 29.0%, RD 3.0%), and renal failure (OC 11.6%, RD 1.2%). Female sex (OC 63.2%, RD -1.3%), a do not hospitalize directive (OC 24.4%, RD -2.6%), change in mood (OC 66.9%, RD -1.2%), and Alzheimer's or dementia (OC 62.1%, RD -1.2%) were more than 10% prevalent and associated with a 1% or more absolute decrease in the risk of a PPED.Though many routinely collected resident characteristics were associated with a PPED transfer, the absence of sufficiently discriminating characteristics suggests that emergency department visits by NH residents are multifactorial and difficult to predict. Future studies should assess the clinical utility of risk factor identification to prevent transfers.

Details

ISSN :
15258610
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Medical Directors Association
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d46897cc413e1db429856f8ca722632c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jamda.2021.11.020