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Impact of case management by advanced practice nurses in primary care on unplanned hospital admissions: a controlled intervention study

BACKGROUND: Increasing unplanned hospital admissions disrupt planned health care, lead to additional morbidity and are expensive. A recent review found only weak evidence for case management preventing unplanned admissions, yet case management of older people is being implemented widely in the UK. W...

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Autores principales: Huws, Dyfed W, Cashmore, Deborah, Newcombe, Robert G, Roberts, Catherine, Vincent, Judith, Elwyn, Glyn
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2442434/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18510730
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-8-115
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author Huws, Dyfed W
Cashmore, Deborah
Newcombe, Robert G
Roberts, Catherine
Vincent, Judith
Elwyn, Glyn
author_facet Huws, Dyfed W
Cashmore, Deborah
Newcombe, Robert G
Roberts, Catherine
Vincent, Judith
Elwyn, Glyn
author_sort Huws, Dyfed W
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Increasing unplanned hospital admissions disrupt planned health care, lead to additional morbidity and are expensive. A recent review found only weak evidence for case management preventing unplanned admissions, yet case management of older people is being implemented widely in the UK. We aimed to study the effect of advanced practice nurse case management on unplanned medical and geriatric hospital admission rates in patients 50 years and over, and on admission risk in a 'higher risk' sub-group of patients in the UK. METHODS: Case management by advanced practice nurses in NHS primary care practices in the Swansea Local Health Board area, Wales, UK. We conducted a prospective non-randomized controlled intervention study comparing unplanned medical and geriatric patient admissions between five intervention and thirty non-intervention practices during a pre-intervention year and an intervention year. RESULTS: For all lengths of stay, comparing intervention (n = 5) with non-intervention practices (n = 30) from pre-intervention to intervention year, we found that the unplanned medical and geriatric admission rate was significantly lower in the intervention group – adjusted relative risk of 0.909; relative risk reduction 9.1% (95% credible limit 0.840 to 0.984, p = 0.018); absolute risk reduction 0.99 admissions per 100 patients (95% credible limit 0.17 to 1.86, p = 0.018). For lengths of stay of one night or more we observed a stronger effect – adjusted relative risk 0.896; relative risk reduction 10.41% (95%, credible limit 0.820 to 0.979, p = 0.015). Most of the rate reduction was due to a reduction in the number of new admissions but much less so for admissions of lengths of stay of at least one night, compared to all lengths of stay. We did not find a statistically significant effect on re-admission or multiple re-admission rates in 'higher risk' patients previously admitted one or more times – adjusted relative risk of further multiple admissions per previously admitted patient 0.908 (95% credible limit 0.765, 1.077); relative risk reduction 9.3%; adjusted relative risk of total admissions per multiple admitter 0.995 (95% credible limit 0.940, 1.053) relative risk reduction 0.6%. CONCLUSION: Although this study reports a reduction in unplanned admission rates in the intervention practices, this appears to be only in part directly due to nurse case management: most of the reduction did not occur in multipe admitters whom were case managed. Further research is needed to explain this finding, to elucidate how best to target the attention of case managers and to examine the complexity of potential outcomes in terms of the nature and necessity of admissions and most suitable lengths-of-stay in terms of acute care or rehabilittion need.
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spelling pubmed-24424342008-07-02 Impact of case management by advanced practice nurses in primary care on unplanned hospital admissions: a controlled intervention study Huws, Dyfed W Cashmore, Deborah Newcombe, Robert G Roberts, Catherine Vincent, Judith Elwyn, Glyn BMC Health Serv Res Research Article BACKGROUND: Increasing unplanned hospital admissions disrupt planned health care, lead to additional morbidity and are expensive. A recent review found only weak evidence for case management preventing unplanned admissions, yet case management of older people is being implemented widely in the UK. We aimed to study the effect of advanced practice nurse case management on unplanned medical and geriatric hospital admission rates in patients 50 years and over, and on admission risk in a 'higher risk' sub-group of patients in the UK. METHODS: Case management by advanced practice nurses in NHS primary care practices in the Swansea Local Health Board area, Wales, UK. We conducted a prospective non-randomized controlled intervention study comparing unplanned medical and geriatric patient admissions between five intervention and thirty non-intervention practices during a pre-intervention year and an intervention year. RESULTS: For all lengths of stay, comparing intervention (n = 5) with non-intervention practices (n = 30) from pre-intervention to intervention year, we found that the unplanned medical and geriatric admission rate was significantly lower in the intervention group – adjusted relative risk of 0.909; relative risk reduction 9.1% (95% credible limit 0.840 to 0.984, p = 0.018); absolute risk reduction 0.99 admissions per 100 patients (95% credible limit 0.17 to 1.86, p = 0.018). For lengths of stay of one night or more we observed a stronger effect – adjusted relative risk 0.896; relative risk reduction 10.41% (95%, credible limit 0.820 to 0.979, p = 0.015). Most of the rate reduction was due to a reduction in the number of new admissions but much less so for admissions of lengths of stay of at least one night, compared to all lengths of stay. We did not find a statistically significant effect on re-admission or multiple re-admission rates in 'higher risk' patients previously admitted one or more times – adjusted relative risk of further multiple admissions per previously admitted patient 0.908 (95% credible limit 0.765, 1.077); relative risk reduction 9.3%; adjusted relative risk of total admissions per multiple admitter 0.995 (95% credible limit 0.940, 1.053) relative risk reduction 0.6%. CONCLUSION: Although this study reports a reduction in unplanned admission rates in the intervention practices, this appears to be only in part directly due to nurse case management: most of the reduction did not occur in multipe admitters whom were case managed. Further research is needed to explain this finding, to elucidate how best to target the attention of case managers and to examine the complexity of potential outcomes in terms of the nature and necessity of admissions and most suitable lengths-of-stay in terms of acute care or rehabilittion need. BioMed Central 2008-05-29 /pmc/articles/PMC2442434/ /pubmed/18510730 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-8-115 Text en Copyright © 2008 Huws et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Huws, Dyfed W
Cashmore, Deborah
Newcombe, Robert G
Roberts, Catherine
Vincent, Judith
Elwyn, Glyn
Impact of case management by advanced practice nurses in primary care on unplanned hospital admissions: a controlled intervention study
title Impact of case management by advanced practice nurses in primary care on unplanned hospital admissions: a controlled intervention study
title_full Impact of case management by advanced practice nurses in primary care on unplanned hospital admissions: a controlled intervention study
title_fullStr Impact of case management by advanced practice nurses in primary care on unplanned hospital admissions: a controlled intervention study
title_full_unstemmed Impact of case management by advanced practice nurses in primary care on unplanned hospital admissions: a controlled intervention study
title_short Impact of case management by advanced practice nurses in primary care on unplanned hospital admissions: a controlled intervention study
title_sort impact of case management by advanced practice nurses in primary care on unplanned hospital admissions: a controlled intervention study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2442434/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18510730
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-8-115
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