Abstract
ObjectivesTo evaluate whether the Acute Frailty Network (AFN) was more effective than usual practice in supporting older people living with frailty to return home from hospital sooner and healthier.DesignStaggered difference-in-difference panel event study allowing for differential effects across intervention cohorts.SettingAll English National Health Service (NHS) acute hospital sites.ParticipantsAll 1 410 427 NHS patients aged 75+ with high frailty risk who had an emergency hospital admission to acute, general or geriatric medicine departments between 1 January 2012 and 31 March 2019.InterventionMembership of the AFN, a quality improvement collaborative designed to support acute hospitals in England deliver evidence-based care for older people with frailty. 66 hospital sites joined the AFN in six sequential cohorts, the first starting in January 2015, the sixth in May 2018. Usual care was delivered in the remaining 248 control sites.Main outcome measuresLength of hospital stay, in-hospital mortality, institutionalisation, hospital readmission.ResultsNo significant effects of AFN membership were found for any of the four outcomes nor were there significant effects for any individual cohort.ConclusionsTo realise its aims, the AFN might need to develop better resourced intervention and implementation strategies.
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