Transitional care

Transitional care refers to the coordination and continuity of health care during a movement from one healthcare setting to either another or to home, called care transition, between health care practitioners and settings as their condition and care needs change during the course of a chronic or acute illness. Older adults who suffer from a variety of health conditions often need health care services in different settings to meet their many needs. For young people the focus is on moving successfully from child to adult health services.

A recent position statement from the American Geriatrics Society defines transitional care as follows:[1] For the purpose of this position statement, transitional care is defined as a set of actions designed to ensure the coordination and continuity of health care as patients transfer between different locations or different levels of care within the same location. Representative locations include (but are not limited to) hospitals, sub-acute and post-acute nursing homes, the patient’s home, primary and specialty care offices, and long-term care facilities. Transitional care is based on a comprehensive plan of care and the availability of health care practitioners who are well-trained in chronic care and have current information about the patient’s goals, preferences, and clinical status. It includes logistical arrangements, education of the patient and family, and coordination among the health professionals involved in the transition. Transitional care, which encompasses both the sending and the receiving aspects of the transfer, is essential for persons with complex care needs.

Defining and understanding transitional care

During transitions, patients with complex medical needs, primarily older patients, are at risk for poorer outcomes due to medication errors and other errors of communication among the involved healthcare providers and between providers and patients/family caregivers. Most research in the area of transitional care has studied the transition from hospitalization to the next provider setting – often a sub-acute nursing facility, a rehabilitation facility, or home either with or without professional homecare services. Adverse patient outcomes include continuation or recurrence of symptoms, temporary or permanent disability, and death.[2]

Healthcare utilization outcomes for patients experiencing poor transitional care include returning to the emergency room or being admitted to the hospital. As healthcare expenditures rise at an unsustainable rate, there is increasing focus by patients, providers, and policymakers on restraining unnecessary resource utilization such as that incurred by preventable re-hospitalizations.

Transitional care or transition care also refers to the transition of young people with chronic conditions into adult-based services. Transition care is a Youth Health service. As children mature into young adults, they outgrow the expertise of children’s services (paediatrics) and need to find an adult health service that suits them. A program in Australia GMCT Transition Care is an initiative aimed at improving continuity of care for young people with chronic health as they move from children's (paediatric) to adult health services.

Continuity of health care

Lake Taylor Transitional Care Hospital

Continuity of health care (also called continuum of care[3]) is to what degree the care is coherent and linked, in turn depending on the quality of information flow, interpersonal skills, and coordination of care.[4] Continuity of health care means different things to different types of caregivers, and can be of several types:

  • Continuity of information. It includes that information on prior events is used to give care that is appropriate to the patient's current circumstance.[4]
  • Continuity of personal relationships, recognizing that an ongoing relationship between patients and providers is the undergirding that connects care over time and bridges discontinuous events.[4]
  • Continuity of clinical management.[4]

To avoid misinterpretation, the type of continuity should be agreed to before any related discussions or planning begin.[4] Seamless care refers to an optimal situation where there is continuity in the healthcare even in the presence of many transitions.[3]

Analysis of medical errors usually reveals the presence of many gaps in health continuity, yet only rarely do gaps produce accidents.[5] Patient safety is increased by understanding and reinforcing health care providers' normal ability to bridge gaps.[5]

Measuring quality of transitional care

Care Transitions Measure

The only currently nationally endorsed measure of transitional care quality is the Care Transitions Measure (CTM), which is a 15-item survey for administration to patients after discharge from the hospital.[6] The measure also exists as a 3-item survey. Patient responses to the survey predicts return to the emergency department and/or hospital. Dr. Eric Coleman and his team at the University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center developed the CTM, as well as an intervention designed to improve patient outcomes during transitions.

Improving quality of transitional care

After leaving a particular care setting, older patients may not understand how to manage their health care conditions or whom to call if they have a question or if their condition gets worse. Poorly managed transitions can lead to physical and emotional stress for both patients and their caregivers. During a transition, the patients' preferences or personal goals in one setting may not be passed on to the next setting. This may result in important elements of the care plan "falling through the cracks".[7]

Ideally, every patient's primary physician would be responsible for the patient through every health care process at all times, but this has been regarded as practically impossible, and, in reality, more effort must rather be put into making transitions more effective.[8] Nevertheless, it has been clearly demonstrated that longitudinal, personal continuity with a general practitioner reduces the need for out-of-hours services and acute admissions to hospital. Furthermore mortality is lowered. The associations are dose dependent and probably causal.[9]

Care Transitions Intervention

The Care Transitions Intervention (CTI)[10] is a coaching intervention to assist patients in resuming self-care following a change in health status. It uses coaching techniques to ensure that patients are comfortable in managing their own medications and their own health information, understand the signs and symptoms that should lead them to contact a healthcare provider, and have assertion skills to ask important questions of providers. Although the coaching intervention occurs for the first 30 days following the transition, this approach has been shown to significantly reduce hospital readmission as far out as six months.[11]

In 2002, the University of Colorado Denver implemented a program called Care Transitions Intervention®. As part of the program, a Transitions Coach works directly with patients and family members for 30 days after discharge to help them understand and manage their complex postdischarge needs, ensuring continuity of care across settings. Participants in the program have a 20 to 40 percent lower hospital readmission rate at 30, 90, and 180 days postdischarge.[12]

Turfing

Turfing is where a healthcare provider transfers a patient they could have taken care of to another provider in order to reduce their own patient load.[13] According to one study in the US, nine percent of physicians admitted that they had transferred a patient in such manner.[14]

See also

References

  1. AGS Health Care Systems Committee (2006). "Improving the Quality of Transitional Care for Persons with Complex Care Needs". Position Statement. The American Geriatrics Society. Archived from the original on 2 February 2007.
  2. Martin MA, Press VG, Nyenhuis SM, Krishnan JA, Erwin K, Mosnaim G, et al. (December 2016). "Care transition interventions for children with asthma in the emergency department". The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology. 138 (6): 1518–1525. doi:10.1016/j.jaci.2016.10.012. PMC 5327498. PMID 27931533.
  3. Haggerty JL, Reid RJ, Freeman GK, Starfield BH, Adair CE, McKendry R (November 2003). "Continuity of care: a multidisciplinary review". BMJ. 327 (7425): 1219–1221. doi:10.1136/bmj.327.7425.1219. PMC 274066. PMID 14630762.
  4. Reid R, Haggerty J, McKendry R (March 2002). Defusing the Confusion: Concepts and Measures of Continuity of Healthcare (PDF) (Report). Canadian Health Services Research Foundation. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 March 2012.
  5. Cook RI, Render M, Woods DD (March 2000). "Gaps in the continuity of care and progress on patient safety". BMJ. 320 (7237): 791–794. doi:10.1136/bmj.320.7237.791. PMC 1117777. PMID 10720370.
  6. "Care Transitions Project, Health Care Policy and Research, Measures". University of Colorado Hospital. Archived from the original on 20 October 2007.
  7. Coleman EA (April 2003). "Falling through the cracks: challenges and opportunities for improving transitional care for persons with continuous complex care needs". Journal of the American Geriatrics Society. 51 (4): 549–555. doi:10.1046/j.1532-5415.2003.51185.x. PMID 12657078. S2CID 20072076.
  8. Warth GJ (21 April 2011). "Continuity of Care Starts With You". Medscape.
  9. Sandvik H, Hetlevik Ø, Blinkenberg J, Hunskaar S (February 2022). "Continuity in general practice as predictor of mortality, acute hospitalisation, and use of out-of-hours care: a registry-based observational study in Norway". The British Journal of General Practice. 72 (715): e84–e90. doi:10.3399/BJGP.2021.0340. PMC 8510690. PMID 34607797.
  10. "Supporting Providers in Improving Transitional Care". Colorado Foundation for Medical Care. Archived from the original on 7 July 2011.
  11. Coleman EA. "The Care Transitions Program".
  12. "Transition Coaches Reduce Readmissions for Medicare Patients With Complex Postdischarge Needs". Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. 2013-04-10. Retrieved 2013-05-10.
  13. Stern DT, Caldicott CV (April 1999). "Turfing: patients in the balance". Journal of General Internal Medicine. 14 (4): 243–248. doi:10.1046/j.1525-1497.1999.00325.x. PMC 1496571. PMID 10203637.
  14. Rau J (June 2012). "Doctors Admit to Unprofessional Behavior in Study at 3 Chicago Hospitals". Kaiser Health News via MedScape.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.