Program reduces hospitalizations and costs for nursing home residents with pneumoniaJune 07, 2006A program that includes having chest x-rays performed in the nursing home reduced the number of nursing home residents hospitalized because of pneumonia and other lower respiratory tract infections, according to a study in the June 7 issue of JAMA. Pneumonia and other lower respiratory tract infections are common among residents of nursing homes. These infections are among the most frequent reasons for transferring residents to a hospital, according to background information in the article. Hospitalization can lead to a reduction in quality of life, a decline in functional status, falls, and other hazards. The economic costs associated with such hospital transfers are substantial. Given the potential hazards to residents and the burden on the health care health system, a strategy for treating residents with pneumonia on-site in the nursing home may be beneficial. However, the effectiveness of providing on-site care has been uncertain. Mark Loeb, M.D., M.Sc., of McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, and colleagues developed a clinical pathway, or program, for treating nursing home residents with pneumonia or other lower respiratory tract infections on-site in the nursing home to determine if the program would reduce hospitalizations and health care costs. The randomized trial included 680 residents aged 65 years or older, who met a standardized definition of lower respiratory tract infection, in 22 nursing homes in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. The residents received either usual care or treatment according to the program that was devised, which included use of oral antimicrobials, portable chest radiographs, oxygen saturation monitoring, rehydration, and close monitoring by a research nurse. Thirty-four residents (10 percent) of 327 residents in the clinical pathway group were hospitalized compared with 76 (22 percent) of 353 residents in the usual care group. Adjusting for the clustering of residents in nursing homes, the weighted average admission rate was 8 percent in the clinical pathway group vs. 20 percent in the usual care group, with an average difference of 12 percent. The average number of hospital days per resident was 0.79 in the clinical pathway group vs. 1.74 in the usual care group, with an average difference of 0.95 days per resident. The death rates in both study groups were similar. There were 24 deaths (8 percent) among residents enrolled in the clinical pathway group and 32 deaths (9 percent) among residents in the usual care group. There were no significant differences in changes in health-related quality of life or functional status measures. The clinical pathway resulted in an overall cost savings of U.S. $1,016 per resident treated. "These data have important implications for the delivery of health care services for both long-term care facilities and acute care hospitals. Treating nursing home residents with pneumonia with the clinical pathway can reduce the burden to emergency departments and inpatient hospital units, particularly during influenza season, when many nursing home residents with pneumonia are frequently sent to the hospital," the authors write. JAMA and Archives Journals |
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| Related Pneumonia Current Events and Pneumonia News Articles Amid the flu epidemic, don't forget RSV in young children Influenza, particularly H1N1, has understandably captured the attention of public health officials, the media and the public. Prioritizing low-cost, simple health measures would save 2.5 million child lives a year Almost a third of the children under age five who die each year could be saved if governments rebalance health spending to ensure low-cost, simple interventions such as safe water and hygiene, bed nets and basic maternal and newborn care, leading aid agency World Vision said today. Currently, 8.8 million children a year die before age five, most of preventable causes. Fewer emergency patients seen within recommended time frame One in four emergency department patients in 2006 waited longer to be evaluated by a clinician than recommended at triage, an increase from one in five in 1997. Possible help in fight against muscle-wasting disease A compound already used to treat pneumonia could become a new therapy for an inherited muscular wasting disease, according to researchers at the University of Oregon and the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry in New York. Henry Ford Hospital study: A MRSA strain linked to high death rates A strain of MRSA that causes bloodstream infections is five times more lethal than other strains and has shown to have some resistance to the potent antibiotic drug vancomycin used to treat MRSA, according to a Henry Ford Hospital study. Commentary warns of unexpected consequences of proton pump inhibitor use in reflux disease Despite being highly effective and beneficial for many patients, unexpected consequences are emerging in patients who are prescribed proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) for reflux diseases. Scientists discover influenza's Achilles heel: Antioxidants As the nation copes with a shortage of vaccines for H1N1 influenza, a team of Alabama researchers have raised hopes that they have found an Achilles' heel for all strains of the flu-antioxidants. Lessons from flu seasons past Pregnant women who catch the flu are at serious risk for flu-related complications, including death, and that risk far outweighs the risk of possible side effects from injectable vaccines containing killed virus, according to an extensive review of published research and data from previous flu seasons. Older Patients with Dementia at Increased Risk for Flu Mortality An epidemiological study on pneumonia and influenza (P&I) in adults age 65 and over reports that patients with dementia are diagnosed with flu less frequently, have shorter hospital stays, and have a fifty percent higher rate of death than those without dementia. OMRF scientists discover promising new path for treating traumas A discovery by scientists at the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation could help save lives threatened by traumatic injuries like those sustained in car crashes or on the battlefield. The work also holds potential for treating severe infectious diseases and diabetes. More Pneumonia Current Events and Pneumonia News Articles |
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