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Journal Article

Citation

Andrews K. J. Am. Geriatr. Soc. 1986; 34(1): 5-11.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1986, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

3941244

Abstract

Eight percent of the elderly patients discharged from a geriatric unit in one year were readmitted within three months. Forty-six percent had been living alone and nearly all of these had received full community support at the time of discharge. Recurrent problems were the reason for readmission in 59% of cases, mainly due to falls, incontinence, and confusion. Only 54% of the readmitted patients were discharged home again--those with new additional problems tended to die in hospital, whereas those with recurrent problems often required institutional long-term care. It is concluded that even with careful discharge planning, a proportion of patients will require readmission, some of which will also require long-term institutional care. This number is quite small in terms of the total number of patients discharged from a geriatric unit and should not be a reason for seeking nursing home care at an early stage.


Language: en

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