A Pharmacist-Led Transitional Care Program to Reduce Hospital Readmissions in Older Adults
Limitations
A limitation of GMED is that we monitored only admissions to our hospital; therefore, we did not account for any hospitalizations that may have occurred outside the STVHCS. Another limitation is that this was not a randomized controlled trial, and we used a convenience sample of patients who met our criteria for eligibility but were not seen due to time constraints. This introduces potential bias such that patients admitted and discharged on nights or weekends when the CPS was not available were not included in the transitional care program group, and these patients may fundamentally differ from those admitted and discharged Monday through Friday.
However, Khanna and colleagues found that night or weekend admission was not associated with 30-day readmission or other worse outcomes (such as length of stay, 30-day emergency department visit, or intensive care unit transfer) in 857 general medicine admissions at a tertiary care hospital.26 Every effort was made to include as many eligible patients as possible in the transitional program group, and we were able to demonstrate that the patients in the 2 groups were similar. Frailty and prior hospital admission were more prevalent, although not significantly so, in the transitional program group, suggesting that any selection bias would have actually attenuated—not enhanced—the observed effect of the transitional program. Although the transitional program group patients were slightly younger by 0.3 years, they were similar in frailty status and CCI score.
Conclusion
The GMED program was associated with reduced 30-day hospital readmission, discontinuation of unnecessary medications, and corrected medication errors and discrepancies. We propose that a CPS-based transitional care program can improve the quality of care for older patients being discharged to home.
Acknowledgments
Supported by funding from the Veterans Health Administration T21 Non-Institutional Long-Term Care Initiative and VA Office of Rural Health and the San Antonio Geriatrics Research, Education, and Clinical Center. The sponsor did not have any role in the design, methods, data collection, or analysis, and preparation.
Author Contributions
R. Rottman-Sagebiel developed the transitional program concept and design and executed the program implementation, interpretation of data, and preparation of the manuscript. S. Pastewait, N. Cupples, A. Conde, M. Moris, and E. Gonzalez assisted with program design and implementation. S. Cope assisted with interpretation of data and preparation of the manuscript. H. Braden assisted with interpretation of data. D. MacCarthy assisted with data management and statistical analysis. C. Wang and S. Espinoza developed the program concept and design, performed statistical analysis and interpretation of data, and helped prepare the manuscript.
Advances in Geriatrics
Advances in Geriatrics features articles focused on quality improvement/quality assurance initiatives, pilot studies, best practices, research, patient education, and patient-centered care written by health care providers associated with Veteran Health Administration Geriatric Research Education and Clinical Centers. Interested authors can submit articles at editorialmanager.com/fedprac or send a brief 2 to 3 sentence abstract to fedprac@mdedge.com for feedback and publication recommendations.