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Previously submitted to: Journal of Medical Internet Research (no longer under consideration since Apr 11, 2024)

Date Submitted: Jul 18, 2023

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.

Impact of regular televisits on unplanned hospital admissions of nursing home residents: a pre-post intervention study

  • Anne-Catherine Redeker; 
  • Tobias Martin; 
  • Sarah Veldeman; 
  • Carina Barbosa Pereira; 
  • Janosch Kunczik; 
  • Michael Czaplik; 
  • Andreas Follmann

ABSTRACT

Background:

Hospital admissions occur frequently in nursing homes and are often preventable. Inappropriate hospitalizations due to ambulatory care sensitive conditions bring major risks for the residents, put the emergency departments under pressure and generate high costs for the health sector. Telemedical solutions are of great potential to intensify medical follow-up of the residents and therefore reduce hospital admissions.

Objective:

In this study, we evaluated whether the implementation of regular medical televisits, in addition to home visits, can reduce unplanned hospital admissions.

Methods:

In 2021 a nursing home in rural Germany introduced a telemedical system, linking the facility to a general practitioner (GP). Data concerning the unplanned hospitalizations of the residents was collected for 2021/22 and its historical time period in 2018/19. Thereafter, hospital admissions were compared between the two time periods, and between residents of 2021/22 who did or did not receive regular televisits by their GP.

Results:

Baseline characteristics were comparable between residents of 2018 and 2021, as well as between residents of 2021 receiving or not telemedical care. Unplanned hospital admissions had significantly decreased (P<.0001) after implementation of regular televisits. Furthermore, a significantly lower (P=.04) number of hospital admissions was noted among residents benefiting from regular televisits by their GP, compared to the control group solely followed by regular home visits.

Conclusions:

The successful implementation of a telemedical system providing ambulatory care in nursing homes shows promising results to reduce unplanned hospital admissions and avoid its negative consequences.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Redeker AC, Martin T, Veldeman S, Barbosa Pereira C, Kunczik J, Czaplik M, Follmann A

Impact of regular televisits on unplanned hospital admissions of nursing home residents: a pre-post intervention study

JMIR Preprints. 18/07/2023:50981

DOI: 10.2196/preprints.50981

URL: https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/50981

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