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. 1991 Jan-Feb;6(1):27-34.
doi: 10.1007/BF02599386.

Long-term care needs of hospitalized persons with AIDS: a prospective cohort study

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Long-term care needs of hospitalized persons with AIDS: a prospective cohort study

W C McCormick et al. J Gen Intern Med. 1991 Jan-Feb.

Abstract

Objective: As the treatment for HIV infection has improved, AIDS has become a chronic disease, and the demand for long-term care has increased. The authors studied a cohort of hospitalized persons with AIDS to determine the proportion and characteristics of AIDS patients who could appropriately be cared for in long-term care facilities with skilled nursing.

Design: Prospective cohort study.

Setting: Medical wards of five Seattle tertiary care hospitals.

Participants: 120 consecutive hospitalized persons with AIDS and their primary care physicians, nurses, and social workers.

Measurements and main results: Appropriateness for long-term care was determined by the patients' physicians, nurses, and social workers. Persons with AIDS who were appropriate for long-term care constituted 32% of the cohort (38 of 120), accounting for 35% of hospital days (11 of these 38 were discharged to long-term care facilities). Four admission characteristics were independently related to appropriateness: impaired activities of daily living, diagnosis of central nervous system illness or poor cognition, living alone, and weight loss. A discriminant function correctly classified over 80% of patients for appropriateness and was developed into a predictive index for planning patient care (sensitivity = 0.74, specificity = 0.85).

Conclusions: The authors conclude that one-third of hospitalized persons with AIDS may be appropriate for care in long-term care settings, accounting for one-third of the days AIDS patients currently spend in hospitals. These patients can be identified early in hospital stays using a simple predictive index at the bedside.

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