Journal
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY
Volume 56, Issue 12, Pages 2171-2179Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2008.02023.x
Keywords
hospitalization; functional decline; recovery
Categories
Funding
- National Institute on Aging [AG029233, AG00912, AG10418, K24AG029812]
- Johns Hopkins University (CMB)
- Summa Health System Foundation to Akron City Hospital
- John A. Hartford Foundation, Inc. [2003-0455]
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To compare functional outcomes in the year after discharge for older adults discharged from the hospital after an acute medical illness with a new or additional disability in their basic self-care activities of daily living (ADL) (compared with preadmission baseline 2 weeks before admission) with those of older adults discharged with baseline ADL function and identify predictors of failure to recover to baseline function 1 year after discharge. Observational. Tertiary care hospital, community teaching hospital. Older (aged >= 70) patients nonelectively admitted to general medical services (1993-1998). Number of ADL disabilities at preadmission baseline and 1, 3, 6, and 12 months after discharge. Outcomes were death, sustained decline in ADL function, and recovery to baseline ADL function at each time point. By 12 months after discharge, of those discharged with new or additional ADL disability, 41.3% died, 28.6% were alive but had not recovered to baseline function, and 30.1% were at baseline function. Of those discharged at baseline function, 17.8% died, 15.2% were alive but with worse than baseline function, and 67% were at their baseline function (P <.001). Of those discharged with new or additional ADL disability, the presence or absence of recovery by 1 month was associated with long-term outcomes. Age, cardiovascular disease, dementia, cancer, low albumin, and greater number of dependencies in instrumental ADLs independently predicted failure to recover. For older adults discharged with new or additional disability in ADL after hospitalization for medical illness, prognosis for functional recovery is poor. Rehabilitation interventions of longer duration and timing than current reimbursement allows, caregiver support, and palliative care should be evaluated.
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