mHOMR: a feasibility study of an automated system for identifying inpatients having an elevated risk of 1-year mortality

Author:

Wegier PeteORCID,Koo Ellen,Ansari Shahin,Kobewka Daniel,O'Connor Erin,Wu Peter,Steinberg Leah,Bell Chaim,Walton Tara,van Walraven Carl,Embuldeniya Gayathri,Costello Judy,Downar James

Abstract

ObjectiveThe need for clinical staff to reliably identify patients with a shortened life expectancy is an obstacle to improving palliative and end-of-life care. We developed and evaluated the feasibility of an automated tool to identify patients with a high risk of death in the next year to prompt treating physicians to consider a palliative approach and reduce the identification burden faced by clinical staff.MethodsTwo-phase feasibility study conducted at two quaternary healthcare facilities in Toronto, Canada. We modified the Hospitalised-patient One-year Mortality Risk (HOMR) score, which identifies patients having an elevated 1-year mortality risk, to use only data available at the time of admission. An application prompted the admitting team when patients had an elevated mortality risk and suggested a palliative approach. The incidences of goals of care discussions and/or palliative care consultation were abstracted from medical records.ResultsOur model (C-statistic=0.89) was found to be similarly accurate to the original HOMR score and identified 15.8% and 12.2% of admitted patients at Sites 1 and 2, respectively. Of 400 patients included, the most common indications for admission included a frailty condition (219, 55%), chronic organ failure (91, 23%) and cancer (78, 20%). At Site 1 (integrated notification), patients with the notification were significantly more likely to have a discussion about goals of care and/or palliative care consultation (35% vs 20%, p = 0.016). At Site 2 (electronic mail), there was no significant difference (45% vs 53%, p = 0.322).ConclusionsOur application is an accurate, feasible and timely identification tool for patients at elevated risk of death in the next year and may be effective for improving palliative and end-of-life care.

Funder

Canadian Frailty Network

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Health Policy

Reference34 articles.

1. Access to palliative care by disease trajectory: a population-based cohort of Ontario decedents;Seow;BMJ Open,2018

2. A review of the trials which examine early integration of outpatient and home palliative care for patients with serious illnesses;Davis;Ann Palliat Med,2015

3. The impact of advance care planning on end of life care in elderly patients: randomised controlled trial;Detering;BMJ,2010

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