학술논문

Implementation of an in-reach rehabilitation program can increase the rate of discharge home from acute hospital care.
Document Type
Article
Source
Australian Health Review. 2023, Vol. 47 Issue 5, p619-625. 7p.
Subject
*LENGTH of stay in hospitals
*EVALUATION of human services programs
*FUNCTIONAL status
*MANN Whitney U Test
*HUMAN services programs
*MEDICAL care research
*CRITICAL care medicine
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*REHABILITATION
*DATA analysis software
*DISCHARGE planning
Language
ISSN
0156-5788
Abstract
Objective. This study describes how a model of early rehabilitation ('in-reach rehabilitation') can be integrated into acute care provision for hospitalised patients with high rehabilitation needs. This pragmatic evaluation aimed to assess service impact on home discharge rates from acute care. Methods. An integrated early rehabilitation service was implemented at a tertiary teaching hospital in Sydney, Australia. Eligible patients were screened, placed on a waitlist, and treated in order of debility (six to eight patients concurrently). Routine data were collected and compared between those who received an in-reach rehabilitation program, and controls who remained on waitlist. Results. From December 2021 to September 2022, 229 patients were identified as suitable for in-reach rehabilitation; of whom 100 received an in-reach program and the remaining 129 were waitlist controls. Patients who received in-reach rehabilitation achieved a significantly higher rate of discharge home from acute care compared to waitlist controls (46.0% vs 24.0%, P = 0.002) and lower rates of transfer to subacute inpatient rehabilitation (43.0% vs 62.0%). This was despite in-reach patients having high functional care needs (60% needed assistance from ≥two people to mobilise) and complex medical needs (median hospital length of stay 44.5 days, IQR 27.8-66.0). Conclusions. It is feasible to deliver in-reach rehabilitation to hospitalised patients with heterogeneous diagnoses who have high rehabilitation needs. The rate of discharge home directly from acute wards is higher among those patients who received early in-reach rehabilitation compared to those on a waitlist. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]