4.7 Article

Video-telehealth to support clinical assessment and management of acutely unwell older people in Residential Aged Care: a pre-post intervention study

Journal

BMC GERIATRICS
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12877-021-02703-y

Keywords

Telemedicine; Long-term care; Geriatric emergency medicine; Aged; Avoidable hospitalization; Nursing; Telehealth; Implementation science; Aged 80 and over; Transitional care

Funding

  1. Hunter New England Local Health District

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The study added video telehealth consultations to an existing program aiming to reduce emergency department visits and hospital admissions for acutely unwell residents in aged care facilities. Over the 28-month study period, 1271 emergency department visits occurred, with 739 subsequent hospital admissions, and the results showed that the addition of video telehealth did not provide any additional benefit.
Background Older people living in Residential Aged Care (RAC) are at high risk of clinical deterioration. Telehealth has the potential to provide timely, patient-centred care where transfer to hospital can be a burden and avoided. The extent to which video telehealth is superior to other forms of telecommunication and its impact on management of acutely unwell residents in aged care facilities has not been explored previously. Methods In this study, video-telehealth consultation was added to an existing program, the Aged Care Emergency (ACE) program, aiming at further reducing Emergency Department (ED) visits and hospital admissions. This controlled pre-post study introduced video-telehealth consultation as an additional component to the ACE program for acutely unwell residents in RACs. Usual practice is for RACs and ACE to liaise via telephone. During the study, when the intervention RACs called the ED advanced practice nurse, video-telehealth supported clinical assessment and management. Five intervention RACs were compared with eight control RACs, all of whom refer to one community hospital in regional New South Wales, Australia. Fourteen months pre-video-telehealth was compared with 14 months post-video-telehealth using generalized linear mixed models for hospital admissions after an ED visit and ED visits. One thousand two hundred seventy-one ED visits occurred over the 28-month study period with 739 subsequent hospital admissions. Results There were no significant differences in hospital admission or ED visits after the introduction of video-telehealth; adjusted incident rate ratios (IRR) were 0.98 (confidence interval (CI) 0.55 to 1.77) and 0.89 (95% CI 0.53 to 1.47) respectively. Conclusions Video-telehealth did not show any incremental benefit when added to a structured hospital avoidance program with nursing telephone support.

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