4.7 Article

Timely care for frail older people referred to hospital improves efficiency and reduces mortality without the need for extra resources

Journal

AGE AND AGEING
Volume 43, Issue 4, Pages 472-477

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ageing/aft170

Keywords

frailty; improvement science; systems thinking; efficiency; mortality; older people

Funding

  1. Health Foundation

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Objective: we undertook a patient flow analysis of older emergency patients to identify and address delays in ensuring timely care, without additional resources. Design: prospective systems redesign study over 2 years. Setting: the Geriatric Medicine Directorate in an acute hospital (Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust) with 1920 beds. Subjects: older patients admitted as emergencies. Methods: diagnostic patient flow analysis followed by a series of Plan Do Study Act cycles to test and implement changes by a multidisciplinary team using time series run charts. Results: 60% of patients aged 75+ years arrived in the Emergency Department during office hours, but two-thirds of the admissions to GM wards were outside office hours highlighting a major delay. Three changes were undertaken to address this, Discharge to Assess, Seven Day Working and the establishment of a Frailty Unit. Average bed occupancy fell by 20.4 beds (95% confidence interval (CI) -39.6 to -1.2, P = 0.037) for similar demand. The risk of hospital mortality also fell by 2.25% (before 11.4% (95% CI 10.4-12.4%), after 9.15% (95% CI 7.6-10.7%) which equates to a number needed to treat of 45 and a 19.7% reduction in relative risk of mortality. The risk of re-admission remained unchanged. Conclusion: redesigning the system of care for older emergency patients led to reductions in bed occupancy and mortality without affecting re-admission rates or requiring additional resources.

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