Elderly bedridden patients with dementia use over one quarter of resources in internal medicine wards in an Israeli hospital

Abstract Background Elderly bedridden patients with dementia (EBRPD) are a growing segment of the population. We aimed to describe acute care hospitalization of EBRPD in internal medicine wards: the prevalence of EBRPD, their impact on hospital resources and hospital ecology, one-year survival, and...

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Main Authors: Inbal Weiss Salz, Yehuda Carmeli, Avi Levin, Noga Fallach, Tali Braun, Sharon Amit
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-05-01
Series:Israel Journal of Health Policy Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13584-020-00379-0
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author Inbal Weiss Salz
Yehuda Carmeli
Avi Levin
Noga Fallach
Tali Braun
Sharon Amit
author_facet Inbal Weiss Salz
Yehuda Carmeli
Avi Levin
Noga Fallach
Tali Braun
Sharon Amit
author_sort Inbal Weiss Salz
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Elderly bedridden patients with dementia (EBRPD) are a growing segment of the population. We aimed to describe acute care hospitalization of EBRPD in internal medicine wards: the prevalence of EBRPD, their impact on hospital resources and hospital ecology, one-year survival, and one-year readmission-free survival. Methods The study setting was the internal medicine division of one tertiary care hospital in Israel. We conducted a point-prevalence survey to measure the prevalence of EBRPD and the prevalence of multidrug-resistant organism (MDRO) carriage. We also conducted a retrospective chart review of EBRPD who were hospitalized in the internal medicine division in order to assess resource use, survival, and readmission. Results In the point prevalence surveys (N = 1667 patients), EBRPD comprised 24.3% of patients and 59.0% of mechanically ventilated patients. EBRPD were twice as likely to be colonized or infected by MDROs as other patients (39.3% vs. 18%, p < 0.001); thus, 41% of MDRO carriers during the survey days were EBRPD. In the retrospective study (N = 517 EBRPD), 80% of EBRPD received antibiotics; on average, they received an antibiotic on 87.7% of their hospital days. One-year survival was 35.6% and one-year readmission-free survival was 16.4%. Conclusions Acute care hospitalization of EBRPD accounted for a high proportion of bed occupancy and ventilator use in internal medicine wards. EBRPD significantly increase the potential for MDRO transmission. Policymakers should seek alternatives to acute care hospitalization for EBRPD.
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spelling doaj.art-1a4d03370e3b4b19b3819d2d8aa4b8652022-12-21T20:31:48ZengBMCIsrael Journal of Health Policy Research2045-40152020-05-01911510.1186/s13584-020-00379-0Elderly bedridden patients with dementia use over one quarter of resources in internal medicine wards in an Israeli hospitalInbal Weiss Salz0Yehuda Carmeli1Avi Levin2Noga Fallach3Tali Braun4Sharon Amit5National Center for Infection Control and Antibiotic Resistance, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical CenterNational Center for Infection Control and Antibiotic Resistance, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical CenterDepartment of Epidemiology, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical CenterNational Center for Infection Control and Antibiotic Resistance, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical CenterDepartment of Epidemiology, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical CenterDepartment of Epidemiology, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical CenterAbstract Background Elderly bedridden patients with dementia (EBRPD) are a growing segment of the population. We aimed to describe acute care hospitalization of EBRPD in internal medicine wards: the prevalence of EBRPD, their impact on hospital resources and hospital ecology, one-year survival, and one-year readmission-free survival. Methods The study setting was the internal medicine division of one tertiary care hospital in Israel. We conducted a point-prevalence survey to measure the prevalence of EBRPD and the prevalence of multidrug-resistant organism (MDRO) carriage. We also conducted a retrospective chart review of EBRPD who were hospitalized in the internal medicine division in order to assess resource use, survival, and readmission. Results In the point prevalence surveys (N = 1667 patients), EBRPD comprised 24.3% of patients and 59.0% of mechanically ventilated patients. EBRPD were twice as likely to be colonized or infected by MDROs as other patients (39.3% vs. 18%, p < 0.001); thus, 41% of MDRO carriers during the survey days were EBRPD. In the retrospective study (N = 517 EBRPD), 80% of EBRPD received antibiotics; on average, they received an antibiotic on 87.7% of their hospital days. One-year survival was 35.6% and one-year readmission-free survival was 16.4%. Conclusions Acute care hospitalization of EBRPD accounted for a high proportion of bed occupancy and ventilator use in internal medicine wards. EBRPD significantly increase the potential for MDRO transmission. Policymakers should seek alternatives to acute care hospitalization for EBRPD.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13584-020-00379-0GeriatricsResource utilizationAntibiotic resistanceMortality
spellingShingle Inbal Weiss Salz
Yehuda Carmeli
Avi Levin
Noga Fallach
Tali Braun
Sharon Amit
Elderly bedridden patients with dementia use over one quarter of resources in internal medicine wards in an Israeli hospital
Israel Journal of Health Policy Research
Geriatrics
Resource utilization
Antibiotic resistance
Mortality
title Elderly bedridden patients with dementia use over one quarter of resources in internal medicine wards in an Israeli hospital
title_full Elderly bedridden patients with dementia use over one quarter of resources in internal medicine wards in an Israeli hospital
title_fullStr Elderly bedridden patients with dementia use over one quarter of resources in internal medicine wards in an Israeli hospital
title_full_unstemmed Elderly bedridden patients with dementia use over one quarter of resources in internal medicine wards in an Israeli hospital
title_short Elderly bedridden patients with dementia use over one quarter of resources in internal medicine wards in an Israeli hospital
title_sort elderly bedridden patients with dementia use over one quarter of resources in internal medicine wards in an israeli hospital
topic Geriatrics
Resource utilization
Antibiotic resistance
Mortality
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13584-020-00379-0
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