A cohort study of the effects of multidisciplinary in-patient primary care in older adults

Martin Gronbech Jorgensen, Maria Rodrigo-Domingo, Stig Andersen, Johannes Riis, Dorthe Bruun Jakobsen, Mikkel Lerche, Hanne Hostrup, Jane Andreasen

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Aim: To evaluate to the effects of a multifactorial, multidisciplinary in-patient municipality intervention on functioning, need-of-care, and quality of life in functionally declining older adults. Findings: Following the intervention, patients had increased quality of life, which remained at the post-intervention level even after 6 months. Further, participants had lower need-of-care and increased performance in physical function tests. Message: A well-structured multifactorial and multidisciplinary in-patient intervention may lead to long-term clinically relevant improvements in functionally declining older adults. Purpose: To evaluate short and long-term effects of a multifactorial and multidisciplinary in-patient municipality intervention including training of activities of daily living, cardiovascular exercise, resistance training and social activities on quality-of-life, need-of-care, and physical function in older adults at risk of further functional decline. Method: A cohort study including data collected rigorously during 3.5 years at an in-patient municipality rehabilitation center in Aalborg, Denmark. Patients received a multifactorial and multidisciplinary intervention. Outcomes were quality-of-life (EQ5D), weekly need-of-care hours, and test of physical functioning (sit-to-stand, 6-min walking test, tandem balance). Results: Data was collected from 532 patients (63.3% women). The median [5; 95 percentiles] age was 79 [55; 92] years with a length-of-stay of 21 [8; 55] days. The mean (95% CI) EQ5D index score showed a clinically relevant improvement from admission 0.46 (0.44; 0.48) to discharge 0.69 (0.67; 0.71) and there was no decline 6-month postdischarge 0.67 (0.64; 0.70). The weekly need-of-care decreased significantly by 7.2 (6.6, 7.9) h from a mean of 9.8 h before admission to 2.6 h 6-month postdischarge. Sit-to-stand improved from 6.3 (6.0; 6.7) to 9.3 (8.9; 9.6) repetitions, 6-min walking test from 147 (138; 156) to 217 (207; 227) m, and tandem balance from 20.7 (19.8; 21.6) to 25.2 (24.8; 26.2) s. Conclusion: Our results were remarkable and highlight that a well-structured multifactorial and interdisciplinary intervention with a clear aim and inclusion criteria related to functional decline may lead to long-term clinically relevant improvements in functionally declining older adults. Future studies should, however, explore similar interventions in comparable populations preferably in randomized controlled designs.

Original languageEnglish
JournalEuropean Geriatric Medicine
Volume11
Issue number4
Pages (from-to)677-684
Number of pages8
ISSN1878-7649
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2020

Keywords

  • Frailty
  • In-patient care
  • Multidisciplinary rehabilitation intervention
  • Need-of-care
  • Physical functioning
  • Quality of life

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