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. 2019 May 22;9(5):e027220.
doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-027220.

Retrospective evaluation of healthcare utilisation and mortality of two post-discharge care programmes in Singapore

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Retrospective evaluation of healthcare utilisation and mortality of two post-discharge care programmes in Singapore

Ian Yi Han Ang et al. BMJ Open. .

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the impact on healthcare utilisation frequencies and charges, and mortality of a programme for frequent hospital utilisers and a programme for patients requiring high acuity post-discharge care as part of an integrated healthcare model.

Design: A retrospective quasi-experimental study without randomisation where patients who received post-discharge care interventions were matched 1:1 with unenrolled patients as controls.

Setting: The National University Health System (NUHS) Regional Health System (RHS), which was one of six RHS in Singapore, implemented the NUHS RHS Integrated Interventions and Care Extension (NICE) programme for frequent hospital utilisers and the NUHS Transitional Care Programme (NUHS TCP) for high acuity post-discharge care. The programmes were supported by the Ministry of Health in Singapore, which is a city-state nation located in Southeast Asia with a 5.6 million population.

Participants: Linked healthcare administrative data, for the time period of January 2013 to December 2016, were extracted for patients enrolled in NICE (n=554) or NUHS TCP (n=270) from June 2014 to December 2015, and control patients.

Interventions: For both programmes, teams conducted follow-up home visits and phone calls to monitor and manage patients' post-discharge.

Primary outcome measures: One-year pre- and post-enrolment healthcare utilisation frequencies and charges of all-cause inpatient admissions, emergency admissions, emergency department attendances, specialist outpatient clinic (SOC) attendances, total inpatient length of stay and mortality rates were compared.

Results: Patients in NICE had lower mortality rate, but higher all-cause inpatient admission, emergency admission and emergency department attendance charges. Patients in NUHS TCP did not have lower mortality rate, but had higher emergency admission and SOC attendance charges.

Conclusions: Both NICE and NUHS TCP had no improvements in 1 year healthcare utilisation across various setting and metrics. Singular interventions might not be as impactful in effecting utilisation without an overhauling transformation and restructuring of the hospital and healthcare system.

Keywords: hospitalisation; length of stay; mortality; patient readmission; post-discharge care; transitional care.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing interests: IYHA, XQT, and SAT are a part of the NUHS RHS strategic planning office, which is involved in the planning and development of programmes under the purview of the NUHS RHS. SEN was the programme director of the NUHS TCP.

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