Evaluating the care provision of a community-based serious-illness care program via chart measures.

Christine E Kistler, Matthew J Van Dongen, Natalie C Ernecoff, Timothy P Daaleman, Laura C Hanson
Author Information
  1. Christine E Kistler: Department of Family Medicine, University of North Carolina, 590 Manning Drive, CB #7595, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599, USA. Christine_Kistler@med.unc.edu. ORCID
  2. Matthew J Van Dongen: Department of Internal Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
  3. Natalie C Ernecoff: Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
  4. Timothy P Daaleman: Department of Family Medicine, University of North Carolina, 590 Manning Drive, CB #7595, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599, USA.
  5. Laura C Hanson: Department of Internal Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although quality-of-care domains for home-based primary and palliative programs have been proposed, they have had limited testing in practice. Our aim was to evaluate the care provision in a community-based serious-illness care program, a combined home-based primary and palliative care model.
METHODS: Retrospective chart review of patients in an academic community-based serious-illness care program in central North Carolina from August 2014 to March 2016 (n = 159). Chart review included demographics, health status, and operationalized measures of seven quality-of-care domains: medical assessment, care coordination, safety, quality of life, provider competency, goal attainment, and access.
RESULTS: Patients were mostly women (56%) with an average age of 70 years. Patients were multi-morbid (53% ≥3 comorbidities), functionally impaired (45% had impairment in ≥2 activities of daily living) and 32% had dementia. During the study period, 31% of patients died. Chart review found high rates assessment of functional status (97%), falls (98%), and medication safety (96%). Rates of pain assessment (70%), advance directive discussions (65%), influenza vaccination (59%), and depression assessment (54% of those with a diagnosis of depression) were lower. Cognitive barriers, spiritual needs, and behavioral issues were assessed infrequently (35, 22, 21%, respectively).
CONCLUSION: This study is one of the first to operationalize and examine quality-of-care measures for a community-based serious-illness care program, an emerging model for vulnerable adults. Our operationalization should not constitute validation of these measures and revealed areas for improvement; however, the community-based serious-illness care program performed well in several key quality-of-care domains. Future work is needed to validate these measures.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. T35 AG038047/NIA NIH HHS
  2. 6432-SP/Duke Foundation
  3. 5 T35 AG038047/Medical Students Training in Aging Research

MeSH Term

Aged
Critical Care
Critical Illness
Female
Humans
Palliative Care
Quality of Life
Retrospective Studies

Word Cloud

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