Living at home after emergency hospital admission: prospective cohort study in older adults with and without cognitive spectrum disorder

Abstract Background Cognitive spectrum disorders (CSDs) are common in hospitalised older adults and associated with adverse outcomes. Their association with the maintenance of independent living has not been established. The aim was to establish the role of CSDs on the likelihood of living at home 3...

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Main Authors: Jennifer K. Burton, Bruce Guthrie, Simona M. Hapca, Vera Cvoro, Peter T. Donnan, Emma L. Reynish
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-12-01
Series:BMC Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12916-018-1199-z
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spelling doaj-1b1e765aa175430685a7aab0226366822020-11-25T01:29:43ZengBMCBMC Medicine1741-70152018-12-0116111210.1186/s12916-018-1199-zLiving at home after emergency hospital admission: prospective cohort study in older adults with and without cognitive spectrum disorderJennifer K. Burton0Bruce Guthrie1Simona M. Hapca2Vera Cvoro3Peter T. Donnan4Emma L. Reynish5Academic Geriatric Medicine, Institute of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences, University of GlasgowPopulation Health Sciences Division, University of DundeePopulation Health Sciences Division, University of DundeeNHS FifePopulation Health Sciences Division, University of DundeeDementia and Ageing Research Group, Faculty of Social Science, University of StirlingAbstract Background Cognitive spectrum disorders (CSDs) are common in hospitalised older adults and associated with adverse outcomes. Their association with the maintenance of independent living has not been established. The aim was to establish the role of CSDs on the likelihood of living at home 30 days after discharge or being newly admitted to a care home. Methods A prospective cohort study with routine data linkage was conducted based on admissions data from the acute medical unit of a district general hospital in Scotland. 5570 people aged ≥ 65 years admitted from a private residence who survived to discharge and received the Older Persons Routine Acute Assessment (OPRAA) during an incident emergency medical admission were included. The outcome measures were living at home, defined as a private residential address, 30 days after discharge and new care home admission at hospital discharge. Outcomes were ascertained through linkage to routine data sources. Results Of the 5570 individuals admitted from a private residence who survived to discharge, those without a CSD were more likely to be living at home at 30 days than those with a CSD (93.4% versus 81.7%; difference 11.7%, 95%CI 9.7–13.8%). New discharge to a care home affected 236 (4.2%) of the cohort, 181 (76.7%) of whom had a CSD. Logistic regression modelling identified that all four CSD categories were associated with a reduced likelihood of living at home and an increased likelihood of discharge to a care home. Those with delirium superimposed on dementia were the least likely to be living at home (OR 0.25), followed by those with dementia (OR 0.43), then unspecified cognitive impairment (OR 0.55) and finally delirium (OR 0.57). Conclusions Individuals with a CSD are at significantly increased risk of not returning home after hospitalisation, and those with CSDs account for the majority of new admissions to care homes on discharge. Individuals with delirium superimposed on dementia are the most affected. We need to understand how to configure and deliver healthcare services to enable older people to remain as independent as possible for as long as possible and to ensure transitions of care are managed supportively.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12916-018-1199-zCognitive spectrum disorderDementiaDeliriumDelirium superimposed on dementiaCare homeLong-term care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jennifer K. Burton
Bruce Guthrie
Simona M. Hapca
Vera Cvoro
Peter T. Donnan
Emma L. Reynish
spellingShingle Jennifer K. Burton
Bruce Guthrie
Simona M. Hapca
Vera Cvoro
Peter T. Donnan
Emma L. Reynish
Living at home after emergency hospital admission: prospective cohort study in older adults with and without cognitive spectrum disorder
BMC Medicine
Cognitive spectrum disorder
Dementia
Delirium
Delirium superimposed on dementia
Care home
Long-term care
author_facet Jennifer K. Burton
Bruce Guthrie
Simona M. Hapca
Vera Cvoro
Peter T. Donnan
Emma L. Reynish
author_sort Jennifer K. Burton
title Living at home after emergency hospital admission: prospective cohort study in older adults with and without cognitive spectrum disorder
title_short Living at home after emergency hospital admission: prospective cohort study in older adults with and without cognitive spectrum disorder
title_full Living at home after emergency hospital admission: prospective cohort study in older adults with and without cognitive spectrum disorder
title_fullStr Living at home after emergency hospital admission: prospective cohort study in older adults with and without cognitive spectrum disorder
title_full_unstemmed Living at home after emergency hospital admission: prospective cohort study in older adults with and without cognitive spectrum disorder
title_sort living at home after emergency hospital admission: prospective cohort study in older adults with and without cognitive spectrum disorder
publisher BMC
series BMC Medicine
issn 1741-7015
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Abstract Background Cognitive spectrum disorders (CSDs) are common in hospitalised older adults and associated with adverse outcomes. Their association with the maintenance of independent living has not been established. The aim was to establish the role of CSDs on the likelihood of living at home 30 days after discharge or being newly admitted to a care home. Methods A prospective cohort study with routine data linkage was conducted based on admissions data from the acute medical unit of a district general hospital in Scotland. 5570 people aged ≥ 65 years admitted from a private residence who survived to discharge and received the Older Persons Routine Acute Assessment (OPRAA) during an incident emergency medical admission were included. The outcome measures were living at home, defined as a private residential address, 30 days after discharge and new care home admission at hospital discharge. Outcomes were ascertained through linkage to routine data sources. Results Of the 5570 individuals admitted from a private residence who survived to discharge, those without a CSD were more likely to be living at home at 30 days than those with a CSD (93.4% versus 81.7%; difference 11.7%, 95%CI 9.7–13.8%). New discharge to a care home affected 236 (4.2%) of the cohort, 181 (76.7%) of whom had a CSD. Logistic regression modelling identified that all four CSD categories were associated with a reduced likelihood of living at home and an increased likelihood of discharge to a care home. Those with delirium superimposed on dementia were the least likely to be living at home (OR 0.25), followed by those with dementia (OR 0.43), then unspecified cognitive impairment (OR 0.55) and finally delirium (OR 0.57). Conclusions Individuals with a CSD are at significantly increased risk of not returning home after hospitalisation, and those with CSDs account for the majority of new admissions to care homes on discharge. Individuals with delirium superimposed on dementia are the most affected. We need to understand how to configure and deliver healthcare services to enable older people to remain as independent as possible for as long as possible and to ensure transitions of care are managed supportively.
topic Cognitive spectrum disorder
Dementia
Delirium
Delirium superimposed on dementia
Care home
Long-term care
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12916-018-1199-z
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