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The impact of digital technology in care homes on unplanned secondary care usage and associated costs

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The impact of digital technology in care homes on unplanned secondary care usage and associated costs. / Garner, Alex; Lewis, Jen; Dixon, Simon et al.
In: Age and Ageing, 29.02.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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APA

Garner, A., Lewis, J., Dixon, S., Preston, N., Caiado, C. C. S., Hanratty, B., Jones, M., Knight, J., & Mason, S. M. (2024). The impact of digital technology in care homes on unplanned secondary care usage and associated costs. Age and Ageing, Article afae004. https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afae004

Vancouver

Garner A, Lewis J, Dixon S, Preston N, Caiado CCS, Hanratty B et al. The impact of digital technology in care homes on unplanned secondary care usage and associated costs. Age and Ageing. 2024 Feb 29;afae004. Epub 2024 Feb 13. doi: 10.1093/ageing/afae004

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Bibtex

@article{0cf9a8a1927b486681663e6907da8a4a,
title = "The impact of digital technology in care homes on unplanned secondary care usage and associated costs",
abstract = "BackgroundA substantial number of Emergency Department (ED) attendances by care home residents are potentially avoidable. Health Call Digital Care Homes is an app-based technology that aims to streamline residents{\textquoteright} care by recording their observations such as vital parameters electronically. Observations are triaged by remote clinical staff. This study assessed the effectiveness of the Health Call technology to reduce unplanned secondary care usage and associated costs.MethodsA retrospective analysis of health outcomes and economic impact based on an intervention. The study involved 118 care homes across the North East of UK from 2018 to 2021. Routinely collected NHS secondary care data from County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust was linked with data from the Health Call app. Three outcomes were modelled monthly using Generalised Linear Mixed Models: counts of emergency attendances, emergency admissions and length of stay of emergency admissions. A similar approach was taken for costs. The impact of Health Call was tested on each outcome using the models.FindingsData from 8,702 residents were used in the analysis. Results show Health Call reduces the number of emergency attendances by 11% [6–15%], emergency admissions by 25% [20–39%] and length of stay by 11% [3–18%] (with an additional month-by-month decrease of 28% [24–34%]). The cost analysis found a cost reduction of £57 per resident in 2018, increasing to £113 in 2021.InterpretationThe introduction of a digital technology, such as Health Call, could significantly reduce contacts with and costs resulting from unplanned secondary care usage by care home residents.",
author = "Alex Garner and Jen Lewis and Simon Dixon and Nancy Preston and Caiado, {Camila C S} and Barbara Hanratty and Monica Jones and Jo Knight and Mason, {Suzanne M}",
year = "2024",
month = feb,
day = "29",
doi = "10.1093/ageing/afae004",
language = "English",
journal = "Age and Ageing",
issn = "0002-0729",
publisher = "OXFORD UNIV PRESS",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The impact of digital technology in care homes on unplanned secondary care usage and associated costs

AU - Garner, Alex

AU - Lewis, Jen

AU - Dixon, Simon

AU - Preston, Nancy

AU - Caiado, Camila C S

AU - Hanratty, Barbara

AU - Jones, Monica

AU - Knight, Jo

AU - Mason, Suzanne M

PY - 2024/2/29

Y1 - 2024/2/29

N2 - BackgroundA substantial number of Emergency Department (ED) attendances by care home residents are potentially avoidable. Health Call Digital Care Homes is an app-based technology that aims to streamline residents’ care by recording their observations such as vital parameters electronically. Observations are triaged by remote clinical staff. This study assessed the effectiveness of the Health Call technology to reduce unplanned secondary care usage and associated costs.MethodsA retrospective analysis of health outcomes and economic impact based on an intervention. The study involved 118 care homes across the North East of UK from 2018 to 2021. Routinely collected NHS secondary care data from County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust was linked with data from the Health Call app. Three outcomes were modelled monthly using Generalised Linear Mixed Models: counts of emergency attendances, emergency admissions and length of stay of emergency admissions. A similar approach was taken for costs. The impact of Health Call was tested on each outcome using the models.FindingsData from 8,702 residents were used in the analysis. Results show Health Call reduces the number of emergency attendances by 11% [6–15%], emergency admissions by 25% [20–39%] and length of stay by 11% [3–18%] (with an additional month-by-month decrease of 28% [24–34%]). The cost analysis found a cost reduction of £57 per resident in 2018, increasing to £113 in 2021.InterpretationThe introduction of a digital technology, such as Health Call, could significantly reduce contacts with and costs resulting from unplanned secondary care usage by care home residents.

AB - BackgroundA substantial number of Emergency Department (ED) attendances by care home residents are potentially avoidable. Health Call Digital Care Homes is an app-based technology that aims to streamline residents’ care by recording their observations such as vital parameters electronically. Observations are triaged by remote clinical staff. This study assessed the effectiveness of the Health Call technology to reduce unplanned secondary care usage and associated costs.MethodsA retrospective analysis of health outcomes and economic impact based on an intervention. The study involved 118 care homes across the North East of UK from 2018 to 2021. Routinely collected NHS secondary care data from County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust was linked with data from the Health Call app. Three outcomes were modelled monthly using Generalised Linear Mixed Models: counts of emergency attendances, emergency admissions and length of stay of emergency admissions. A similar approach was taken for costs. The impact of Health Call was tested on each outcome using the models.FindingsData from 8,702 residents were used in the analysis. Results show Health Call reduces the number of emergency attendances by 11% [6–15%], emergency admissions by 25% [20–39%] and length of stay by 11% [3–18%] (with an additional month-by-month decrease of 28% [24–34%]). The cost analysis found a cost reduction of £57 per resident in 2018, increasing to £113 in 2021.InterpretationThe introduction of a digital technology, such as Health Call, could significantly reduce contacts with and costs resulting from unplanned secondary care usage by care home residents.

U2 - 10.1093/ageing/afae004

DO - 10.1093/ageing/afae004

M3 - Journal article

JO - Age and Ageing

JF - Age and Ageing

SN - 0002-0729

M1 - afae004

ER -