4.7 Article

Understanding Pathways into Care homes using Data (UnPiCD study): a retrospective cohort study using national linked health and social care data

Journal

AGE AND AGEING
Volume 51, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ageing/afac304

Keywords

Care home; hospital; routine data; data linkage; social care; older people

Funding

  1. Dunhill Medical Trust
  2. Scottish Informatics and Linkage Collaboration [RPGF2002\197]
  3. NHS Education for Scotland/Chief Scientists Office Postdoctoral Clinical Lectureship
  4. Legal and General PLC [PCL/21/01]

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The study found that individuals moving directly from a hospital to a care home are clinically distinct from those moving from the community. Linking cross-sectoral data allows for exploration of pathways into care on a larger scale.
Background Pathways into care are poorly understood but important life events for individuals and their families. UK policy is to avoid moving-in to care homes from acute hospital settings. This assumes that moves from secondary care represent a system failure. However, those moving to care homes from community and hospital settings may be fundamentally different groups, each requiring differing care approaches. Objective To characterise individuals who move-in to a care home from hospital and compare with those moving-in from the community. Design and setting A retrospective cohort study using cross-sectoral data linkage of care home data. Methods We included adults moving-in to care homes between 1/4/13 and 31/3/16, recorded in the Scottish Care Home Census. Care home data were linked to general and psychiatric hospital admissions, community prescribing and mortality records to ascertain comorbidities, significant diagnoses, hospital resource use, polypharmacy and frailty. Multivariate logistic regression identified predictors of moving-in from hospital compared to from community. Results We included 23,892 individuals moving-in to a care home, 13,564 (56.8%) from hospital and 10,328 (43.2%) from the community. High frailty risk adjusted Odds Ratio (aOR) 5.11 (95% Confidence Interval (CI): 4.60-5.68), hospital discharge with diagnosis of fracture aOR 3.91 (95%CI: 3.41-4.47) or stroke aOR 8.42 (95%CI: 6.90-10.29) were associated with moving-in from hospital. Discharge from in-patient psychiatry was also a highly significant predictor aOR 19.12 (95%CI: 16.26-22.48). Conclusions Individuals moving-in to care homes directly from hospital are clinically distinct from those from the community. Linkage of cross-sectoral data can allow exploration of pathways into care at scale.

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