An inpatient bed for acute nursing home admissions

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Abstract

Background: some older patients are admitted directly to nursing homes without a comprehensive assessment. Objective: to determine whether a hospital assessment bed might provide better assessment, treatment and a more appropriate placement for selected older people. Setting: a single bed in an elderly care unit of a district general hospital. Subjects: older people who general practitioners thought needed nursing home care but whose social workers felt might benefit from inpatient assessment. Main outcome measures: type of treatment needed (acute care, rehabilitation, palliation, long-term care) and placement (home, nursing home, residential home or hospital). Results: of 34 patients assessed, 22 (65%) needed further clinical assessment or care and 26 (75%) left hospital for places other than nursing homes. Conclusions: inpatient assessment is a successful way of assessing the needs of some older people who would otherwise have been admitted directly from their homes to nursing homes.

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Hutchinson, S. G., Tarrant, J., & Severs, M. P. (1998). An inpatient bed for acute nursing home admissions. Age and Ageing, 27(2), 95–98. https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/27.2.95

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