Post-hospital syndrome (phs) and potentially preventable hospitalizations (pph) in adults

  • Martin C
  • Hinkley N
  • Stockman K
  • et al.
N/ACitations
Citations of this article
24Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Introduction: Potentially preventable hospitalizations (PPH) are hospitalizations that could be avoided with ambulatory care. Post hospital syndrome(PHS) is described as a transient period of generalized susceptibility, after hospital discharge, to disease and risk for adverse events, including hospital readmission and death. International efforts focus on hospital-to-home transitions and chronic disease management. Journeys to acute admissions may further inform PPH and PHS. Monash Watch (MW) aims to reduce preventable hospitalizations within current funding, in a cohort with predicted 3 admissions/year within Health Links Chronic Care (HLCC) program in Victoria, Australia. MW applies a telehealth approach with ongoing monitoring of self-reported health journeys. Theory/Methods: PPH and PHS represent a complex interplay of biological, psychosocial, and environmental influences in the context of local service processes. A range of theories exist - from chronic disease flare-ups, poor care transitions to hospitalization-induced allostatic overload. These phenomena reflect diverse, but challenging opportunities for anticipatory care approaches. Aims: To describe patterns of self-reported concerns and health 10 days before and 10 days after discharge from an acute admissions in MW cohort. Methods: Telecare guides conduct regular patient outbound phone calls using Patient Journey Record System (PaJR), an online informatics program. PaJR alerts are intended to act as a selfreported barometer of health perceptions with more alerts per call indicating greater risk of deterioration, PPH and PHS Participants: 103 patients who had an acute admission (total 232 patients) in HLCC cohort monitored for >40 days - in MW intervention group. Measures: Self-reported health care status in 764 PaJR phone call records. Acute (non-surgical) admissions from Victorian Admitted Episode database. Analysis: Descriptive Timeseries using homogeneity metrics using XLSTAT. Results: All self-reported problems (Total Alerts) shifted to a higher level 3 days before an acute admission and stayed at a high level for 10 days post admission. Reported acute disease and illness symptoms (Red Alerts) increased 1 day prior to admission and remained higher level for the 10 days post admission. Patients reported more medication/drug/alcohol changes before than after acute admissions. Self-rated health and feeling depressed worsened around 5 days post discharge. igh levels of medication or drug or alcohol use changes preceded admission, and caregiver/support concerns were at a high level across the board. Discussion: These findings suggest a 'prehospital phase' of poor health and problems that persisted on discharge and seemed worse 5 days after discharge (PHS). The contribution of hospitalization should be re-examined in unstable journeys Conclusions (comprising key findings): Many of those who have acute medical admissions demonstrate deteriorations before admission and do not 'recover' post admission and may deteriorate further. Lessons learned: A 'pre-hospital' phase may prefigure PPH and PHS. Greater attention to selfreported patient journeys in each location may enable anticipatory care. Limitations: A small sample in one geographic location with descriptive data does not have external generalizability. Provider or system integration features are not described. Suggestions for future research: Anticipatory care using telehealth monitoring for PPH and PHS in different settings and cohorts.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Martin, C., Hinkley, N., Stockman, K., & Campbell, D. (2019). Post-hospital syndrome (phs) and potentially preventable hospitalizations (pph) in adults. International Journal of Integrated Care, 19(4), 466. https://doi.org/10.5334/ijic.s3466

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free