1. Information technology-supported integrated health service for older adults in long-term care settings
- Author
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Jung-Yeon Choi, Hongsoo Kim, Seungyeon Chun, Young-il Jung, Sooyoung Yoo, In-Hwan Oh, Gi-Soo Kim, Jin Young Ko, Jae-Young Lim, Minho Lee, Jongseon Lee, and Kwang-il Kim
- Subjects
Health services for the aged ,Information technology ,Long-term care ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background To examine the effectiveness and safety of a data sharing and comprehensive management platform for institutionalized older patients. Methods We applied information technology-supported integrated health service platform to patients who live at long-term care hospitals (LTCHs) and nursing homes (NHs) with cluster randomized controlled study. We enrolled 555 patients aged 65 or older (461 from 7 LTCHs, 94 from 5 NHs). For the intervention group, a tablet-based platform comprising comprehensive geriatric assessment, disease management, potentially inappropriate medication (PIM) management, rehabilitation program, and screening for adverse events and warning alarms were provided for physicians or nurses. The control group was managed with usual care. Co-primary outcomes were (1) control rate of hypertension and diabetes, (2) medication adjustment (PIM prescription rate, proportion of polypharmacy), and (3) combination of potential quality-of-care problems (composite quality indicator) from the interRAI assessment system which assessed after 3-month of intervention. Results We screened 1119 patients and included 555 patients (control; 289, intervention; 266) for analysis. Patients allocated to the intervention group had better cognitive function and took less medications and PIMs at baseline. The diabetes control rate (OR = 2.61, 95% CI 1.37–4.99, p = 0.0035), discontinuation of PIM (OR = 4.65, 95% CI 2.41–8.97, p
- Published
- 2024
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