Abstract
Aim: Nurse-led care aims to optimize the discharge preparation with a focus on increasing patients' independency and self-care abilities. This study compared patients' improvements of self-care abilities and frequency of readmission rate between nurse-led care and regular nursing care within the acute hospital setting. Design: A quasi-experimental design within a real-world setting was used for this work. Methods: We included a pool of 2501 patients from a control group (medically stable in usual care) and 420 patients from an intervention group (nurse-led care). After propensity score matching, the study cohort consisted of 612 patients. Results: From admission to discharge, nurse-led care patients showed superior improvements of total self-care abilities compared to usual care patients. In particular, we found improvements in the following categories: mobility, grooming and excretion. Patients with nurse-led care were furthermore less frequently readmitted to hospital compared with the control group patients. Patient or public contribution: No patient or public contribution.
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Faessler, L., Kofler, S., Wenke-Zobler, J., Brunner, C., Schäfer-Keller, P., De Geest, S., … Conca, A. (2023). The use of nurse-led care intervention to improve self-care abilities subsequently decreasing readmission in multimorbid hospitalized patients: A quasi-experimental study in a real-world setting. Nursing Open, 10(6), 3787–3798. https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.1637
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