Physician Availability in Long-Term Care and Resident Hospital Transfer: A Retrospective Cohort Study
Overview
Affiliations
Objectives: To investigate whether same-day physician access in long-term care homes reduces resident emergency department (ED) visits and hospitalizations.
Design: Retrospective cohort study.
Setting And Participants: 161 long-term care homes in Ontario, Canada, and 20,624 residents living in those homes.
Methods: We administered a survey to Ontario long-term care homes from March to May 2017 to collect their typical wait time for a physician visit. We linked the survey to administrative databases to capture other long-term care home characteristics, resident characteristics, hospitalizations, and ED visits. We defined a cohort of residents living in survey-respondent homes between January and May 2017 and followed each resident for 6 months or until discharge or death. We estimated negative binomial regression models on counts of hospitalizations and ED visits with random intercepts for long-term care homes. We controlled for residents' sociodemographic and illness characteristics, long-term care home size, chain status, rurality, and nurse practitioner access.
Results: Fifty-two homes (32%) reported same-day physician access. Among residents of homes with same-day physician access, 9% had a hospitalization and 20% had an ED visit during follow-up. In contrast, among residents in homes without same-day access, 12% were hospitalized and 22% visited an ED. The adjusted hospitalization and ED rates among residents of homes with same-day physician access were 21% lower (rate ratio = 0.79, P = .02) and 14% lower (rate ratio = 0.86, P = .07), respectively, than residents of other homes. We estimate that nearly 1 in 6 resident hospitalizations could be prevented if all long-term care homes had same-day physician access.
Conclusions And Implications: Residents of long-term care homes with same-day physician access experience lower hospitalization and ED visit rates than residents in homes that wait longer for physicians, even after adjusting for important resident and home characteristics. Improved on-demand access to physicians has the potential to reduce hospital transfer rates.
Menard A, Konikoff L, Adams M, Singh Y, Scott M, Yin C BMJ Open. 2024; 14(11):e086748.
PMID: 39615892 PMC: 11628961. DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-086748.
Nursing Home Residents' Use of Radiography in New Brunswick: A Case for Mobile Radiography?.
Plant E, McCloskey R, Shamputa I, Chandra K, Atkinson P, Fraser J Healthc Policy. 2023; 18(3):31-46.
PMID: 36917452 PMC: 10019512. DOI: 10.12927/hcpol.2023.27036.
Nurse practitioner/physician collaborative models of care: a scoping review protocol.
McGilton K, Haslam-Larmer L, Wills A, Krassikova A, Babineau J, Robert B BMC Geriatr. 2023; 23(1):98.
PMID: 36797669 PMC: 9934505. DOI: 10.1186/s12877-023-03798-1.
McGilton K, Krassikova A, Wills A, Durante V, Yeung L, Vellani S J Appl Gerontol. 2022; 41(11):2296-2306.
PMID: 35758019 PMC: 9234378. DOI: 10.1177/07334648221110210.
Correia R, Mowbray F, Dash D, Katz P, Moser A, Strum R BMC Geriatr. 2022; 22(1):320.
PMID: 35413884 PMC: 9003172. DOI: 10.1186/s12877-022-03011-9.