Intersectoral Ward Rounds on Patients Admitted to Temporary Twenty-Four-Hour Accommodations in Denmark: Case Study

Int J Integr Care. 2022 Feb 11;22(1):12. doi: 10.5334/ijic.5688. eCollection 2022 Jan-Mar.

Abstract

Introduction: Temporary twenty-four-hour accommodations (TTAs) are municipal beds for elderly patients discharged from the hospital with acute treatment, care and/or rehabilitation needs that cannot be met in their own homes. TTAs are staffed by nurses and nursing assistants who are not authorized to prescribe or modify medications. At North Zealand Hospital one third of the many readmissions from a TTA within eight days after discharge have been assessed as preventable.

Description: A hospital-based team rounded on 268 patients at TTAs from May 2017 to October 2019 to promote integrated care. This study aimed to assess the efficacy of the rounding by auditing patient cases. A physician, a nurse, and a pharmacist from the hospital; a general practitioner; and one or two TTA nurses audited 17 cases.

Discussion: Obtaining access to all electronic patient records and reconstructing information shared across sectors were not feasible in all cases.

Conclusion: An overview of the course of treatment was provided in most casesThe patient's health was enhanced in most cases and to a considerable or determining degree in half of casesMedication was optimized in most casesThe succeeding course of treatment was enhanced in more than half of the casesReadmission was prevented in some cases.

Keywords: audits; elderly medical patients; intersectoral; municipal care; temporary accommodation; ward round team.

Publication types

  • Case Reports