Short-Stay Nursing Home Rehabilitation Patients: Transitional Care Problems Pose Research Challenges

Abstract

We conducted a NIH-funded clinical intervention pilot study to improve depression care for short-stay nursing home Medicare-reimbursed rehabilitation patients. Despite a solid theoretical and clinical grounding and the support of a large nursing home company, we encountered several roadblocks to implementation, including 1) involving patients and families, 2) communication between providers, 3) involving community primary care physicians (PCP), 4) staff time constraints, and 5) conducting research with short-stay patients. While frustrating from a research standpoint, these roadblocks closely reflect problems identified by the American Geriatrics Society (AGS) as impeding the delivery of high quality transitional care in geriatrics. We describe these research roadblocks as we encountered them in the clinical setting and place each within the larger context of challenges associated with care transitions, especially for older persons with complex health needs receiving nursing home rehabilitation. Finally, we offer recommendations for researchers conducting much needed research within geriatric transitional care settings, including starting early in the care transition chain and assisting patients and families to provide continuity across care settings

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