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Meta-Analysis
. 2020 Jul 1;49(4):558-569.
doi: 10.1093/ageing/afaa002.

Successful care transitions for older people: a systematic review and meta-analysis of the effects of interventions that support medication continuity

Affiliations
Meta-Analysis

Successful care transitions for older people: a systematic review and meta-analysis of the effects of interventions that support medication continuity

Justine Tomlinson et al. Age Ageing. .

Abstract

Background: medication-related problems occur frequently when older patients are discharged from hospital. Interventions to support medication use have been developed; however, their effectiveness in older populations are unknown. This review evaluates interventions that support successful transitions of care through enhanced medication continuity.

Methods: a database search for randomised controlled trials was conducted. Selection criteria included mean participant age of 65 years and older, intervention delivered during hospital stay or following recent discharge and including activities that support medication continuity. Primary outcome of interest was hospital readmission. Secondary outcomes related to the safe use of medication and quality of life. Outcomes were pooled by random-effects meta-analysis where possible.

Results: twenty-four studies (total participants = 17,664) describing activities delivered at multiple time points were included. Interventions that bridged the transition for up to 90 days were more likely to support successful transitions. The meta-analysis, stratified by intervention component, demonstrated that self-management activities (RR 0.81 [0.74, 0.89]), telephone follow-up (RR 0.84 [0.73, 0.97]) and medication reconciliation (RR 0.88 [0.81, 0.96]) were statistically associated with reduced hospital readmissions.

Conclusion: our results suggest that interventions that best support older patients' medication continuity are those that bridge transitions; these also have the greatest impact on reducing hospital readmission. Interventions that included self-management, telephone follow-up and medication reconciliation activities were most likely to be effective; however, further research needs to identify how to meaningfully engage with patients and caregivers to best support post-discharge medication continuity. Limitations included high subjectivity of intervention coding, study heterogeneity and resource restrictions.

Keywords: continuity of care; hospital discharge; medication management; older people; systematic review.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
PRISMA flow diagram of literature search and included studies.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Effect of intervention activity component compared with usual care on all-cause hospital readmission (a summary of five activity components).

Comment in

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