The proposed actions necessary for the healthcare of persons with multimorbidity include specific function-oriented individual assessment of needs via the distinctive allocation, selection and performance of rehabilitative procedures as well as post-rehabilitative care until the patient's reintegration into his social environment.
Domiciliary rehabilitation is an innovative form of outpatient medical rehabilitation. All components of service provision are delivered in the rehabilitant's home by a multidisciplinary team headed by a physician. The key context factors in the rehab process can be taken into account firsthand. The target group of domiciliary rehabilitation consists of multimorbid patients with severe functional limitations and complex assistance needs, whose rehabilitation options would be poor without this outreach service. Here, as suggested by the WHO concept of functional health, the interaction between health condition and environmental factors is kept in view much better than in other forms of rehabilitation. The positive effects and the efficiency of the rehabilitation measures provided can be assessed very well at a high descriptive level. This fact had been a precondition for legal establishment of domiciliary rehabilitation as a regular service. Domiciliary rehabilitation not only complies with key demands in the health and social policy fields, such as priority of outpatient over inpatient treatment or rehabilitation to precede and accompany long term care, it also constitutes an alternative concept challenging the traditional inpatient rehabilitation approach. The patient, hence, no longer is to fit into the institutional framework of outpatient or inpatient rehabilitation, but the team will fit into the specifics of the patient's unique social and material situation.
The actions proposed range from reviewing existing forms of management to identifying rehabilitative needs and initiating accurately fitting interventions, sensitizing and enlarging competences of involved personnel, considering multimorbidity in guidelines and further research on questions still open.
Since 1. 1. 1985, computer-aided basic medical documentation has been routine at the University Orthopedic Clinic in Friedrichsheim, near Frankfurt. In addition to data on patient's histories, all data needed to satisfy the criteria of the Federal Directive on Operating Cost Rates are gathered. The diagnoses are stored in clear text, in a modified Eichler code, and according to ICD 9. Conversion from the Eichler code to ICD 9 is almost fully automated. In a study covering 100 hospitalized cases the following findings were obtained relating to sources of error and reliability: Without any additional in-house plausibility checks, the rate of error in the ID code, created by coding family name, date of birth, and sex, was 7%. In clear text all diagnoses except one and all forms of therapy were correctly reproduced as contained in the medical report. On the other hand, 7% of the conversions into the Eichler code contained errors. The reason for the difference in the quality of data is pointed out. In some of the other surveys, e.g., of infection rates, the rates of error were very high; most errors had been caused by the ward physicians. Data quality is enhanced by exploitation of routine process data when these control administrative procedures or are used for communication between physicians, since they then become relevant to actions and decisions and hence have to be reliable, regardless of documentation purposes.
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