Interrupted time series evaluation of the impact of a dementia wellbeing service on avoidable hospital admissions for people with dementia in Bristol, England
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Published:2023-03-23
Issue:4
Volume:28
Page:262-270
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ISSN:1355-8196
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Container-title:Journal of Health Services Research & Policy
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language:en
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Short-container-title:J Health Serv Res Policy
Author:
Jones Tim1ORCID,
Redaniel Maria Theresa1,
Ben-Shlomo Yoav1
Affiliation:
1. National Institute for Health and Care Research Applied Research Collaboration West (NIHR ARC West), University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Foundation Trust, Bristol, UK
Abstract
Objectives To determine whether a dementia wellbeing service (DWS) signposting people with dementia to community services decreases the rate of avoidable hospital admissions, in-hospital mortality, complexity of admissions (number of comorbidities) or length of stay. Methods Interrupted time series analysis to estimate the effects of the DWS on hospital outcomes. We included all unplanned admissions for ambulatory care sensitive conditions (‘avoidable hospital admissions’) with a dementia diagnosis recorded in the Hospital Episode Statistics. The intervention region was compared with a demographically similar control region in the 2 years before and 3 years after the implementation of the new service (October 2013 to September 2018). Results There was no strong evidence that admission rates reduced and only weak evidence that the trend in average length of stay reduced slowly over time. In-hospital mortality decreased immediately after the introduction of the dementia wellbeing service compared to comparator areas (x0.64, 95% CI 0.42, 0.97, p = 0.037) but attenuated over the following years. The rate of increase in comorbidities also appeared to slow after the service began; they were similar to comparator areas by September 2018. Conclusions We found no major impact of the DWS on avoidable hospital admissions, although there was weak evidence for slightly shorter length of stay and reduced complexity of hospital admissions. These findings may or may not reflect a true benefit of the service and require further investigation. The DWS was established to improve quality of dementia care; reducing hospital admissions was never its sole purpose. More targeted interventions may be required to reduce hospital admissions for people with dementia.
Funder
National Institute for Health Research Applied Research Collaboration West
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy
Reference30 articles.
1. Association of Incident Dementia With Hospitalizations
2. Dementia in the acute hospital: prospective cohort study of
prevalence and mortality
3. Dementia Wellbeing Service. What is the dementia wellbeing service? https://www.bristoldementiawellbeing.org/Use-our-service/What-is-the-Dementia-Wellbeing-Service, (2017, accessed 10 February 2023).