Clinical characteristics, care professionals’ intervention and care complexity for elderly patients in home hospitalization

Clinical characteristics, care professionals’ intervention and care complexity for elderly patients in home hospitalization

Author:
Publication type: 
Journal Article
Year: 
2019
Journal/Series title: 
Santé Publique
Volume number: 
31
Issue: 
2
Pages: 
269-276
ISSN/ISBN: 
0995-3914
Abstract: 

Introduction: The number of elderly patients in home care in France is currently increasing. Our objective is to describe the clinical characteristics, the care professionals’ intervention and the complexity of follow-up care for this elderly population.Methods: This is a cross-sectional study with a sample of 50 elderly patients aged 75 and over living at home and followed-up in home hospitalization in 2016 by the Assistance Publique Hôpitaux de Paris. The collection of data used the interRAI-CA tool (Resident Assessment Instrument - Contact Assessment).Results: The average age of the sample was 84 years with 48% women, 26% living alone and 96% having a caregiver who had difficulty in caring in 33.3% of cases. Patients had numerous diseases with 68% of the sample who had cognitive difficulties with functional disabilities; Most of them reported pain and 52% had unstable clinical situation. The main care interventions were complex wounds, supportive care and palliative care with technical care and 80% of the sample mobilized more than 3 professionals. Care was considered to be of a high level of complexity for 74% of the elderly patients.Conclusion: Our study showed that elderly patients had care complexity with technical and multi-faceted care implying coordination of stakeholders and support for caregivers. Implementing at-home hospitalization allows to transfer some geriatric patients from hospitalization to the home care and helps the structuration of the geriatric expertise among the primary care services.