16 research outputs found
Differences in triage category, priority level and hospitalization rate between young-old and old-old patients visiting the emergency department.
Emergency Department (ED) are challenged by the increasing number of visits made by the heterogeneous population of elderly persons. This study aims to 1) compare chief complaints (triage categories) and level of priority; 2) to investigate their association with hospitalization after an ED visit; 3) to explore factors explaining the difference in hospitalization rates among community-dwelling older adults aged 65-84 vs 85+ years.
All ED visits of patients age 65 and over that occurred between 2005 and 2010 to the University of Lausanne Medical Center were analyzed. Associations of hospitalization with triage categories and level of priority using regressions were compared between the two age groups. Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition was performed to explore how much age-related differences in prevalence of priority level and triage categories contributed to predicted difference in hospitalization rates across the two age groups.
Among 39'178 ED visits, 8'812 (22.5%) occurred in 85+ patients. This group had fewer high priority and more low priority conditions than the younger group. Older patients were more frequently triaged in "Trauma" (20.9 vs 15.0%) and "Home care impossible" (10.1% vs 4.2%) categories, and were more frequently hospitalized after their ED visit (69.1% vs 58.5%). Differences in prevalence of triage categories between the two age groups explained a quarter (26%) of the total age-related difference in hospitalization rates, whereas priority level did not play a role.
Prevalence of priority level and in triage categories differed across the two age groups but only triage categories contributed moderately to explaining the age-related difference in hospitalization rates after the ED visit. Indeed, most of this difference remained unexplained, suggesting that age itself, besides other unmeasured factors, may play a role in explaining the higher hospitalization rate in patients aged 85+ years
Supply sensitive services in Swiss ambulatory care: An analysis of basic health insurance records for 2003-2007
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Swiss ambulatory care is characterized by independent, and primarily practice-based, physicians, receiving fee for service reimbursement. This study analyses supply sensitive services using ambulatory care claims data from mandatory health insurance. A first research question was aimed at the hypothesis that physicians with large patient lists decrease their intensity of services and bill less per patient to health insurance, and vice versa: physicians with smaller patient lists compensate for the lack of patients with additional visits and services. A second research question relates to the fact that several cantons are allowing physicians to directly dispense drugs to patients ('self-dispensation') whereas other cantons restrict such direct sales to emergencies only. This second question was based on the assumption that patterns of rescheduling patients for consultations may differ across channels of dispensing prescription drugs and therefore the hypothesis of different consultation costs in this context was investigated.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Complete claims data paid for by mandatory health insurance of all Swiss physicians in own practices were analyzed for the years 2003-2007. Medical specialties were pooled into six main provider types in ambulatory care: primary care, pediatrics, gynecology & obstetrics, psychiatrists, invasive and non-invasive specialists. For each provider type, regression models at the physician level were used to analyze the relationship between the number of patients treated and the total sum of treatment cost reimbursed by mandatory health insurance.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The results show non-proportional relationships between patient numbers and total sum of treatment cost for all provider types involved implying that treatment costs per patient increase with higher practice size. The related additional costs to the health system are substantial. Regions with self-dispensation had lowest treatment cost for primary care, gynecology, pediatrics and for psychiatrists whereas "prescription only" areas had lowest cost for specialists with non-invasive and invasive activities.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The results indicate that payment methods for services and for prescription drugs are associated with variations in treatment cost that are unlikely warranted by different medical needs of patients alone. Promoting physician accountability of care by linking reimbursements to quality, not quantity, of services are important policy measures to be considered for health care in Switzerland.</p
Invasive meningococcal disease epidemiology and control measures: a framework for evaluation
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Meningococcal disease can have devastating consequences. As new vaccines emerge, it is necessary to assess their impact on public health. In the absence of long-term real world data, modeling the effects of different vaccination strategies is required. Discrete event simulation provides a flexible platform with which to conduct such evaluations.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A discrete event simulation of the epidemiology of invasive meningococcal disease was developed to quantify the potential impact of implementing routine vaccination of adolescents in the United States with a quadrivalent conjugate vaccine protecting against serogroups A, C, Y, and W-135. The impact of vaccination is assessed including both the direct effects on individuals vaccinated and the indirect effects resulting from herd immunity. The simulation integrates a variety of epidemiologic and demographic data, with core information on the incidence of invasive meningococcal disease and outbreak frequency derived from data available through the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Simulation of the potential indirect benefits of vaccination resulting from herd immunity draw on data from the United Kingdom, where routine vaccination with a conjugate vaccine has been in place for a number of years. Cases of disease are modeled along with their health consequences, as are the occurrence of disease outbreaks.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>When run without a strategy of routine immunization, the simulation accurately predicts the age-specific incidence of invasive meningococcal disease and the site-specific frequency of outbreaks in the Unite States. 2,807 cases are predicted annually, resulting in over 14,000 potential life years lost due to invasive disease. In base case analyses of routine vaccination, life years lost due to infection are reduced by over 45% (to 7,600) when routinely vaccinating adolescents 12 years of age at 70% coverage. Sensitivity analyses indicate that herd immunity plays an important role when this population is targeted for vaccination. While 1,100 cases are avoided annually when herd immunity effects are included, in the absence of any herd immunity, the number of cases avoided with routine vaccination falls to 380 annually. The duration of vaccine protection also strongly influences results.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>In the absence of appropriate real world data on outcomes associated with large-scale vaccination programs, decisions on optimal immunization strategies can be aided by discrete events simulations such as the one described here. Given the importance of herd immunity on outcomes associated with routine vaccination, published estimates of the economic efficiency of routine vaccination with a quadrivalent conjugate vaccine in the United States may have considerably underestimated the benefits associated with a policy of routine immunization of adolescents.</p
Personnes âgées aux urgences: défis actuels et futurs [Older patients at the emergency department: current and future challenges].
Emergency departments are and will be at the front line to face the forthcoming increased use of the health care system by the aging baby boomers cohort. Emergency department services will need to adjust on a quantitative as well as on a qualitative basis to manage the impact of these demographic changes. Various models of care have been developed to improve the care of older geriatric patients in the Emergency department that resulted in favorable results on functional, health, as well as health services utilization outcomes. Key components of these successful models have been identified that require a high level of integration between geriatric and emergency teams
Invasive meningococcal and pneumococcal disease in Switzerland: cost?utility analysis of different vaccine strategies
We performed a cost-utility analysis for various vaccination strategies against meningococcal and pneumococcal diseases (MenC or MenC/PCV-9) in Switzerland. The analysis compared the current recommendations of vaccinating only children with medical risks to the introduction of the vaccination with either the MenC or the MenC/PCV-9 vaccine, administered at 12 or 2, 4 and 6 months of age, into the existing immunisation programme. For a birth cohort of 80,000 children and assuming a vaccine coverage of 80%, the introduction of a generalised vaccination would be cost-effective. The strategy using three doses of MenC/PCV-9 would achieve the highest health benefit, with 440 quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) gained at costs of 34,000 per QALY
Emergency Department use by patients aged 85 years and over, between 2005 and 2010 in a Swiss university hospital
Introduction: Population ageing challenges Emergency Departments
(ED) with a population shift toward higher age groups. People over 65
years are heterogenous with respect to polymorbidity and functional
capacity. Complex situations become more prevalent among patients
aged 85+, the fastest growing segment of the elderly population
(+72% between 2010 and 2030).
Objectives: To identify the trend of ED admission rates for patients
aged 85+ and to compare the characteristics of their ED visits with the
one of patients aged 65-84.
Method: Retrospective analysis of 56162 ED admissions of patients
aged 65+ at the University of Lausanne Medical Center (CHUV), from
2005 to 2010. All visits of patients aged 65+ at the time of admission
were considered. Analyses focus on demographic characteristics, living
arrangement, hospital admission, and median Length of Stay (LOS) in
the ED. Data from 2010 were examined for the degree of emergency
(DE), the main reason for visiting the ED (Swiss triage scale) and
readmission at 30 days.
Results: Between 2005 and 2010, ED visits of patients aged 65 years
and over increased from 8228 to 10390/year (with a slight decrease
of women from 56% to 54%). This is an increment of +26% i.e. 5.9
patients/day more. Patients aged 85+ increased by +46% vs +20%
for the 65-84. ED visits of people aged 18-64 years raised by +20%.
Among patients over 65 years, the proportion of patients aged 85 and
more increased from 23% in 2005 to 27% in 2010.
In 2010, 85+ patients were more likely than 65-84 patients to come
from a NH setting (13% vs 4%), to be hospitalised (70% vs 59%) and
to stay longer in the ED (median LOS 9 hours vs 7 hours). Readmission
to ED within 30 days after discharge did not differ (85+: 14% vs 65-84:
12%) (similar proportions in 2005). In 2010, the first reason for patients
85+ to visit ED was fall/injury (27% vs 18% by 65-84), whereas the
main cause for patients aged 65-84 years was a cardiovascular disorder
(18% vs 16% by 85+). The part of high emergency cases was similar
for patients 85+ and 65-84 (42%).
Conclusion: Among aged patients those aged 85 and over are the
fastest growing group admitted to ED. Compared to their younger
counterparts, their reason to visit ED and their pattern of health
services utilization differ due to specific epidemiological conditions. ED
addressing specific needs of geriatric patients would improve their care
and lead to a better use of available resources