6533b86ffe1ef96bd12cd35e

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Case Management for Patients with Complex Multimorbidity: Development and Validation of a Coordinated Intervention between Primary and Hospital Care

Bernardo Valdivieso-martínezLucas Donat-castellóElisa Soriano-melchorSalvador TortajadaRaquel Faubel-cavaMaría Soledad Giménez-camposAmparo Bahamontes-mulióJulia Villar-lópezJuan M. García-gómez

subject

medicine.medical_specialtyTelemedicineHealth (social science)Sociology and Political ScienceIntegrated Care CasePsychological intervention030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyScientific evidence03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineIntervention (counseling)integrated care; case management; complex multimorbidity; chronic patient; hospital at homeMultimorbidityMedicineOutpatient cliniccase management030212 general & internal medicineintegrated carelcsh:R5-920business.industryHealth Policyhospital at homeRetrospective cohort studymedicine.diseaseIntegrated carecomplex multimorbidityEmergency medicineMedical emergencychronic patientbusinesslcsh:Medicine (General)

description

In the past few years, healthcare systems have been facing a growing demand related to the high prevalence of chronic diseases. Case management programs have emerged as an integrated care approach for the management of chronic disease. Nevertheless, there is little scientific evidence on the impact of using a case management program for patients with complex multimorbidity regarding hospital resource utilisation. We evaluated an integrated case management intervention set up by community-based care at outpatient clinics with nurse case managers from a telemedicine unit. The hypothesis to be tested was whether improved continuity of care resulting from the integration of community-based and hospital services reduced the use of hospital resources amongst patients with complex multimorbidity. A retrospective cohort study was performed using a sample of 714 adult patients admitted to the program between January 2012 and January 2015. We found a significant decrease in the number of emergency room visits, unplanned hospitalizations, and length of stay, and an expected increase in the home care hospital-based episodes. These results support the hypothesis that case management interventions can reduce the use of unplanned hospital admissions when applied to patients with complex multimorbidity.

10.5334/ijic.2493http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5624062