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Avoidable Hospitalizations in Persons with Dementia: a Population-Wide Descriptive Study (2000–2015)
Author(s) -
Claire GodardSebillotte,
Erin Strumpf,
Nadia Sourial,
Louis Rochette,
Éric Pelletier,
Isabelle Vedel
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
canadian geriatrics journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.682
H-Index - 21
ISSN - 1925-8348
DOI - 10.5770/cgj.24.486
Subject(s) - medicine , dementia , context (archaeology) , ambulatory , descriptive statistics , population , ambulatory care , health care , primary care , gerontology , emergency medicine , demography , environmental health , family medicine , disease , paleontology , statistics , mathematics , pathology , sociology , economics , biology , economic growth
Background Whether avoidable hospitalizations in community-dwelling persons with dementia have decreased during primary care reforms is unknown. Methods We described the prevalence and trends in avoidable hos­pitalizations in population-based repeated yearly cohorts of 192,144 community-dwelling persons with incident dementia (Quebec, 2000–2015) in the context of a province-wide pri­mary care reform, using the provincial health administrative database. Results Trends in both types of Ambulatory Care Sensitive Condition (ACSC) hospitalization (general and older population) and 30-day readmission rates remained constant with average rates per 100 person-years: 20.5 (19.9–21.1), 31.7 (31.0–32.4), 20.6 (20.1–21.2), respectively. Rates of delayed hospital discharge (i.e., alternate level of care (ALC) hospitalizations) decreased from 23.8 (21.1–26.9) to 17.9 (16.1–20.1) (relative change -24.6%). Conclusions These figures shed light on the importance of the phenomenon, its lack of improvement for most outcomes over the years, and the need to develop evidence-based policies to prevent avoidable hospitalizations in this vulnerable population.

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