Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10609/151487
Title: Five years of Hospital at Home adoption in Catalonia: impact, challenges, and proposals for quality assurance
Author: González Colom, Rubèn  
Carot-Sans, Gerard  
Vela, Emili  
Espallargues, Mireia  
Hernandez, Carme  
Jimenez-Fabrega, Francesc Xavier  
Nicolás, David  
Suárez, Montserrat
Torne, Elvira  
Villegas Bruguera, Eulalia Balbina  
Ozores, Fernando
Cano, Isaac  
Piera-Jiménez, Jordi  
Roca, Josep  
Citation: González-Colom, R. [Rubèn], Carot-Sans, G. [Gerard], Vela, E. [Emili], Espallargues, M.[Mireia], Hernández, C. [Carme], Jiménez, F.G. [Francesc Xavier], Nicolás, D. [David], Suárez, M. [Montserrat], Torné, E. [Elvira], Villegas Bruguera, E. [Eulalia], Ozores, F. [Fernando], Cano, I. [Isaac], Piera-Jiménez, J. [Jordi] & Roca, J. [Josep]. (2024). Five years of Hospital at Home adoption in Catalonia: impact, challenges, and proposals for quality assurance. BMC Health Services Research, 24(1), 1-11. doi: 10.1186/s12913-024-10603-1
Abstract: Background. Hospital at home (HaH) was increasingly implemented in Catalonia (7.7 M citizens, Spain) achieving regional adoption within the 2011-2015 Health Plan. This study aimed to assess population-wide HaH outcomes over five years (2015-2019) in a consolidated regional program and provide context-independent recommendations for continuous quality improvement of the service. Methods. A mixed-methods approach was adopted, combining population-based retrospective analyses of registry information with qualitative research. HaH (admission avoidance modality) was compared with a conventional hospitalization group using propensity score matching techniques. We evaluated the 12-month period before the admission, the hospitalization, and use of healthcare resources at 30 days after discharge. A panel of experts discussed the results and provided recommendations for monitoring HaH services. Results. The adoption of HaH steadily increased from 5,185 episodes/year in 2015 to 8,086 episodes/year in 2019 (total episodes 31,901; mean age 73 (SD 17) years; 79% high-risk patients. Mortality rates were similar between HaH and conventional hospitalization within the episode [76 (0.31%) vs. 112 (0.45%)] and at 30-days after discharge [973(3.94%) vs. 1112(3.24%)]. Likewise, the rates of hospital re-admissions at 30 days after discharge were also similar between groups: 2,00 (8.08%) vs. 1,63 (6.58%)] or ER visits [4,11 (16.62%) vs. 3,97 (16.03%). The 27 hospitals assessed showed high variability in patients’ age, multimorbidity, severity of episodes, recurrences, and length of stay of HaH episodes. Recommendations aiming at enhancing service delivery were produced. Conclusions. Besides confirming safety and value generation of HaH for selected patients, we found that this service is delivered in a case-mix of different scenarios, encouraging hospital-profiled monitoring of the service.
Keywords: hospital at home
implementation science
integrated care
key performance indicators
multimorbidity
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-024-10603-1
Document type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Issue Date: 1-Feb-2024
Publication license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/  
Linked data: https://bmchealthservres.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12913-024-10603-1/metrics
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