Patterns and Costs of Post-acute Care: a Longitudinal Study of People Aged 60 and over in Dubbo
Overview
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Declining length of stay of older people in hospital has caused concern about shifting of costs from acute to community care services. Because the two types of care are funded through different programs and from different jurisdictions, the coordination of acute and post-acute care has become the major issue. There is, however, little information available on patterns of use and costs of post-acute care either in Australia or elsewhere. In an existing longitudinal community study of older people in Dubbo, New South Wales, data on use of services by people aged 60 years and over for 12 months of hospitalisations was collected by linkage to the records of Home and Community Care providers. Only a quarter of older people received any type of Home and Community Care service in the 12 weeks after discharge and two-thirds of these received only one type of service. While less than 5 per cent received a service from an occupational therapist, physiotherapist or speech therapist, 78 per cent visited a general practitioner after discharge. The average cost of all Home and Community Care services received after hospital discharge was around $12.50 per week per person discharged. The predictors of higher costs of service use were: living alone, and the interactions of high levels of disability with owning a house. Results on service coordination, the identification of post-acute services, cost consequences of program funding, assessment and discharge planning are related to debates emerging from the Commonwealth Heads of Government.
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