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. Trial registration The larger Aged Care Emergency evaluation is registered with ANZ Clinical Trials Registry, ACTRN12616000588493.
This study reports carer strain and coping with medications for people with dementia with an unplanned admission to hospital, and it evaluates the impact of a safe medication intervention on carer coping and carer strain. This was a quasi-experimental pre/post-controlled trial that included a survey of carers about managing medications for people with dementia after discharge. For 88 carers who completed surveys, 33% were concerned about managing medications, and 40% reported difficulties with medication management, including resistive behaviours by people with dementia. Dose administration aids were used by 72% of carers; however, only 15% reported receiving a recent home medicines review by a community pharmacist. High carer strain was reported by 74% of carers. Carer comments described many issues that contributed to high carer stress, as well as their engagement in vigilant activities to maintain medication safety. Strategies that can contribute to carers managing medications and reducing their strain include an increased use of dose administration aids, increased provision of home medicines reviews, and increased education of health professionals to provide adequate support and education about managing medications.
Objective To evaluate whether a safe medication strategy compared with usual care, provided to people with dementia during an unplanned admission, reduces readmissions to hospital and re‐presentation to emergency departments within three months. Methods A prospective, controlled pre‐/post‐trial conducted at two regional hospitals in New South Wales, Australia. Results No treatment effect was seen for time to first re‐presentation or readmission within three months (P = .3). Compliance with six strategies applicable for all participants in the intervention phase was 58%. There was no treatment effect for secondary outcomes including dose administration aid use, home medicines review (HMR) requests by general practitioners and completed HMRs; however, they were significantly higher at the intervention site in both phases. Conclusion A bundle of care to improve medication safety in people with dementia did not reduce re‐presentations or readmissions within three months.
Background People with dementia (PWD) are at risk for medication related harm due to their impaired cognition and frequently being prescribed many medications. Few previous studies of PWD inpatients have been focused on medication safety interventions.This study aimed to evaluate an intervention designed to improve medication safety for people with dementia (PWD) and their carers during an unplanned admission to hospital. This article reports the effect of the intervention on potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs), polypharmacy and anticholinergic burden scores for PWD in the study. Methods A quasi-experimental pre-post design using an intervention site and a control site was conducted in 2017-2019, in a regional area in New South Wales, Australia. PIMs, polypharmacy and anticholinergic burden were measured at admission, discharge and three months after discharge. In addition, medication reconciliation at admission and scoring of pharmacists recommendations using severity and relevance scores were measured. Results There were 628 participants including 350 in the post-intervention phase. Polypharmacy for these admissions was high, and there was approximately 30% reduction in the number of medications at discharge. PIMs at admission were also high, and decreased significantly at discharge however there was no treatment effect associated with the intervention. The mean anticholinergic burden score also decreased significantly between admission and discharge, however, no treatment effect was seen. Conclusions High rates of polypharmacy and PIMs in this study indicate this study population was admitted with multiple comorbidities. Reduced PIMs at discharge were correlated with reduced anticholinergic burden. Medication reconciliation resulted in many recommendations that contributed to the reductions in medications. Although the study did not report a treatment effect, reductions in the number of medications and PIMs reduced medication related risk for PWD. Reduced risks associated with inappropriate or unnecessary medications can reduce hospital admissions and adverse events for PWD. This intervention was feasible to implement, and future multisite studies should be designed to recruit larger study samples to evaluate interventions for improving medication safety for PWD. They should also adopt routine screening for cognitive impairment to identify PWD at admission.
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