(Press-News.org) Contact information: Cindy Fox Aisen
caisen@iupui.edu
317-843-2276
Indiana University
Study: Odds of rehospitalization of cognitively impaired varies by discharge destination
INDIANAPOLIS -- Cognitively impaired older adults released from the hospital are less likely to be rehospitalized within 30 days if they go to a nursing home than if they return to their own home or the home of a family member, according to an Indiana University and Regenstrief Institute study.
Discharge destination following hospitalization and cognitive status are co-dependent factors, according to the study, which followed 976 men and women, age 65 and older.
The study findings are reported in "Interaction Between Cognitive Impairment and Discharge Destination and Its Impact on Rehospitalizations," published in the November issue of the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.
"Why do nursing home residents who are cognitively impaired get readmitted to hospitals less often than those released to a community setting? There may be several explanations," said study first author Arif Nazir, M.D., an assistant clinical professor of medicine at the IU School of Medicine who is on the Board of the American Medical Directors Association. "The nursing home ensures medication adherence, which can be very difficult for cognitively impaired residents who reside at home, even sometimes with support from their families.
"And at home, the physical problems of the cognitively impaired may not be recognized. These are health issues which, if known, would send them back to the hospital."
In additional to being less likely to be readmitted to the hospital than their counterparts who are discharged to the community, the study found that cognitively impaired nursing home residents are also less likely than nursing home residents with healthy brains to be readmitted to a hospital within 30 days of discharge. But the reverse is true if older adults are sent home rather than to an institution. Cognitively impaired individuals released from a hospital to a community setting are more likely to be readmitted to the hospital than those with a healthy brain.
"Patients discharged to nursing homes with Alzheimer's disease and other cognitive impairments may be less physically ill than those who are in a nursing home because of pure physical ailments like heart failure or an infection. The cognitively impaired individuals who end up getting discharged to an institution such as a nursing home typically have social and behavioral issues which these facilities know how to handle," Dr. Nazir said.
The study demonstrates that cognitive impairment is not independently associated with rehospitalizations and that this relationship is modified by discharge destination. The results provide unique and useful insights regarding the interaction of two important risk factors for the rehospitalization of the elderly population, mental status and the discharge destination.
In both nursing homes and in the community setting, the physical problems of the cognitively impaired may not be recognized.
"In some cases families refuse aggressive care for their loved one, but such care may be harder to do when the older adult is living at home," said study senior author Malaz Boustani, M.D., MPH, Regenstrief Investigator, associate professor of medicine at the IU School of Medicine and associate director of the IU Center for Aging Research. He also directs the Healthy Aging Brain Center at Wishard-Eskenazi Health. "And when the cognitively impaired individual is being taken care of at home rather than in a facility, the family, like the family of the physically ill patient with a healthy brain, may just feel unable to handle the burden after release from the hospital."
"To our knowledge," Dr. Nazir said, "this is the first study to investigate whether discharge destination of older adults makes a difference in rehospitalization rate. Our findings -- that it does have an effect -- is yet another factor that families and hospital administrators as well as state and national policy makers will want to take into account for many reasons."
"The fact that odds of rehospitalization are higher if the cognitively impaired individual is sent home from the hospital rather than to a nursing home strongly suggests the importance of developing a personalized transitional care model based on the brain health of older adults as well as the severity of their medical illness," said Dr. Boustani, the chief innovation and implementation officer at IU Health.
###
Co-authors of the study in addition to Drs. Nazir and Boustani are Regenstrief Institute investigators Michael LaMantia, M.D., MPH, assistant professor of medicine at IU; Babar Khan M.D., M.S., assistant professor of medicine at IU; Noll Campbell, Pharm.D., of Purdue University; Siu Hui, Ph.D., professor of statistics at IU; and Joshua Chodosh, M.D., MSHS, of the David Geffen School of Medicine and the VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System.
This work was supported by awards from the Health Resources and Services Administration, from the National Institute on Aging of the National Institutes of Health [R01AG034205, and K23-AG043476], and the John A. Hartford Foundation Center for Excellence in Geriatric Medicine. The content of the study is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the funders.
Study: Odds of rehospitalization of cognitively impaired varies by discharge destination
2013-11-19
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Phthalate exposure linked to preterm birth
2013-11-19
Phthalate exposure linked to preterm birth
ANN ARBOR—The odds of preterm birth for women exposed to a commonly used class of chemicals known as phthalates are increased significantly, according to a new study from the University of Michigan School of Public ...
Non-specialist health workers play important role in improving mental health in developing countries
2013-11-19
Non-specialist health workers play important role in improving mental health in developing countries
New research shows benefits for people with depression, anxiety, dementia, maternal depression, post traumatic stress disorder and alcohol abuse
Non-specialist ...
Corticosteroid added to standard treatment improves eyesight in patients with sudden vision loss
2013-11-19
Corticosteroid added to standard treatment improves eyesight in patients with sudden vision loss
According to study published in Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience
Amsterdam, NL, November 19, 2013 – Nonarteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (NAION) is one of the ...
Blood test accurately diagnoses concussion and predicts long term cognitive disability
2013-11-19
Blood test accurately diagnoses concussion and predicts long term cognitive disability
Penn medicine researchers discover that high levels of a protein in blood after traumatic brain injury correlate with brain tissue damage
PHILADELPHIA ...
'GUMBOS' promise new drugs and electronics: American Chemical Society Prized Science video
2013-11-19
'GUMBOS' promise new drugs and electronics: American Chemical Society Prized Science video
A group of nanoparticles called "GUMBOS" is as varied as their culinary namesake implies, with a wide range of potential applications from cancer therapy to sensors. ...
Smartphone apps lack proven strategies to help smokers quit
2013-11-19
Smartphone apps lack proven strategies to help smokers quit
WASHINGTON, DC (November 19, 2013)—An estimated 11 million smokers in the United States own a smartphone and increasingly they're turning to apps ...
Origin of species: Protein imbalances doom hybrids
2013-11-19
Origin of species: Protein imbalances doom hybrids
Why do crosses between closely related species fail to produce fertile hybrids? A new study led by Professor Axel Imhof of Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet (LMU) in Munich shows that differences ...
Scientists nearing forecasts of long-lived wildfires' paths
2013-11-19
Scientists nearing forecasts of long-lived wildfires' paths
New computer modeling technique offers promise of continually updated predictions
Scientists have developed a new computer modeling technique that for the first time offers the promise of continually-updated ...
UT Dallas computer scientists create 3-D technique
2013-11-19
UT Dallas computer scientists create 3-D technique
3-D imaging technique utilizes famous mathematician's theory
UT Dallas computer scientists have developed a technique to create 3-D images that finds practical applications of a theory created by ...
New study determines more accurate method to date tropical glacier moraines
2013-11-19
New study determines more accurate method to date tropical glacier moraines
Dartmouth-led research may alter previous interpretations of climate's impact on equatorial glaciers
A Dartmouth-led team has found a more accurate method to determine the ages of boulders ...