Abstract
Objective: to identify important demographic, clinical and functional determinants of successful discharge of geriatric patients from skilled nursing facilities (SNFs), particularly the role of multi-morbidity.Design: prospective cohort study with data collection at baseline and at discharge.Setting: fifteen SNFs in the Netherlands.Participants: of 378 eligible patients, 186 were included.Methods: multi-disciplinary teams recorded demographic and disease characteristics, as well as functional status, cognitive functioning and multi-morbidity on admission. The study outcomes were discharge to an independent living situation within 1 year of admission and functional status at discharge (Barthel index).Results: of the included 186 patients, 175 were followed up. Of these patients, 123 (70%) were successfully discharged. High Berg Balance Scale (BBS) and Star Cancellation test (SCT) scores independently contributed to 48% of the variance of functional status at discharge, while low age, high BBS and SCT scores were independently related to successful discharge, explaining 33% of the variance. Multi-morbidity was not an independent determinant of rehabilitation outcome.Conclusion: geriatric patients admitted for 'low intensity' rehabilitation in SNFs after stroke appeared to have a fair prognosis for being successfully discharged. Postural control was an important determinant of both outcome measures. © The Author 2012. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society. All rights reserved.
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Spruit-van Eijk, M., Zuidema, S. U., Buijck, B. I., Koopmans, R. T. C. M., & Geurts, A. C. H. (2012). Determinants of rehabilitation outcome in geriatric patients admitted to skilled nursing facilities after stroke: A Dutch multi-centre cohort study. Age and Ageing, 41(6), 746–752. https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afs105
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