Anderson M A, Helms L B, Hanson K S, DeVilder N W
University of Illinois at Chicago, College of Nursing, Quad Cities Regional Program, Moline 61265, USA.
Nurs Res. 1999 Nov-Dec;48(6):299-307. doi: 10.1097/00006199-199911000-00005.
The extensive literature concerning hospital readmissions is grounded in a medical or hospital perspective, and fails to address hospital readmissions during home care.
To describe clients who have unplanned returns to an inpatient setting during the first 100 days of home care service delivery.
Using the Hospital Readmission Inventory (HRI), an audit tool with previously established validity and reliability, 916 medical records for clients from 11 midwestern home care agencies were reviewed retrospectively.
Typically, clients were referred for their first home care admission after a 9-day hospital length of stay for a cardiovascular, respiratory, or neoplastic disorder. After an average 18-day length home care stay, clients were readmitted to the hospital, usually due to the development of a new problem, or due to deterioration in health status related to the primary or to a secondary medical diagnosis. Significant respiratory, cardiovascular or GI symptoms were generally present at hospital readmission. Typically, readmitted clients were 75 year old married females, who had been able to care for themselves at home. At hospital readmission, home care nurses judged these clients to be moderately ill, and likely in need of acute care.
Chronic illness appears to be the best indicator for hospital readmission. The crucial time period for hospital readmission during home care is the first 2-3 weeks following hospital discharge. Intensive study of home care service arrangements utilized by readmitted patients, as well as agency variations, are needed. Study findings concerning patients readmitted from home care point to similarities with rehospitalized patients generally. Findings may assist home care clinicians in targeting high risk patients who could benefit from interventions aimed at minimizing unplanned returns to the hospital.
大量关于医院再入院的文献都是基于医学或医院的视角,未能涉及居家护理期间的医院再入院情况。
描述在居家护理服务提供的前100天内意外返回住院环境的患者情况。
使用医院再入院清单(HRI)这一具有先前确立的有效性和可靠性的审计工具,对来自11个中西部居家护理机构的916份患者病历进行回顾性审查。
通常,患者因心血管、呼吸或肿瘤疾病住院9天后首次接受居家护理。在平均居家护理18天后,患者再次入院,通常是由于出现了新问题,或者与主要或次要医学诊断相关的健康状况恶化。再次入院时一般存在明显的呼吸、心血管或胃肠道症状。通常,再次入院的患者是75岁的已婚女性,她们此前能够在家中自理。再次入院时,居家护理护士判断这些患者病情中等,可能需要急症护理。
慢性病似乎是医院再入院的最佳指标。居家护理期间医院再入院的关键时间段是出院后的前2至3周。需要对再次入院患者使用的居家护理服务安排以及机构差异进行深入研究。关于从居家护理再次入院患者的研究结果表明,总体上与再次住院患者存在相似之处。研究结果可能有助于居家护理临床医生确定哪些高危患者可以从旨在尽量减少意外再次入院的干预措施中受益。