Author:
Vanasse Alain,Courteau Josiane,Courteau Mireille,Benigeri Mike,Chiu Yohann M.,Dufour Isabelle,Couillard Simon,Larivée Pierre,Hudon Catherine
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Published methods to describe and visualize Care Trajectories (CTs) as patterns of healthcare use are very sparse, often incomplete, and not intuitive for non-experts.
Our objectives are to propose a typology of CTs one year after a first hospitalization for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), and describe CT types and compare patients’ characteristics for each CT type.
Methods
This is an observational cohort study extracted from Quebec’s medico-administrative data of patients aged 40 to 84 years hospitalized for COPD in 2013 (index date). The cohort included patients hospitalized for the first time over a 3-year period before the index date and who survived over the follow-up period. The CTs consisted of sequences of healthcare use (e.g. ED-hospital-home-GP-respiratory therapists, etc.) over a one-year period. The main variable was a CT typology, which was generated by a ‘tailored’ multidimensional State Sequence Analysis, based on the “6W” model of Care Trajectories. Three dimensions were considered: the care setting (“where”), the reason for consultation (“why”), and the speciality of care providers (“which”). Patients were grouped into specific CT types, which were compared in terms of care use attributes and patients’ characteristics using the usual descriptive statistics.
Results
The 2581 patients were grouped into five distinct and homogeneous CT types: Type 1 (n = 1351, 52.3%) and Type 2 (n = 748, 29.0%) with low healthcare and moderate healthcare use respectively; Type 3 (n = 216, 8.4%) with high healthcare use, mainly for respiratory reasons, with the highest number of urgent in-hospital days, seen by pulmonologists and respiratory therapists at primary care settings; Type 4 (n = 100, 3.9%) with high healthcare use, mainly cardiovascular, high ED visits, and mostly seen by nurses in community-based primary care; Type 5 (n = 166, 6.4%) with high healthcare use, high ED visits and non-urgent hospitalisations, and with consultations at outpatient clinics and primary care settings, mainly for other reasons than respiratory or cardiovascular. Patients in the 3 highest utilization CT types were older, and had more comorbidities and more severe condition at index hospitalization.
Conclusions
The proposed method allows for a better representation of the sequences of healthcare use in the real world, supporting data-driven decision making.
Funder
Canadian Institute of Health Research
Fonds de recherche du Québec—Santé
Université de Sherbrooke
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
29 articles.
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