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OUTCOME OF NURSING HOME CARE FOR RESIDENTS WITH ALCOHOL USE DISORDERS

✍ Scribed by CAROL L. JOSEPH; JENNIFER RASMUSSEN; LINDA GANZINI; ROLAND M. ATKINSON


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
116 KB
Volume
12
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-6230

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✦ Synopsis


Objectives:

To describe the outcome of nursing home (nh) care for a previously established cohort of residents with active, inactive or no alcohol use disorder (aud), and to examine demographic variables, health services utilization, mortality and drinking behaviors in this group.

Design:

Retrospective cohort study with participant interviews at nh admission and 3 years later.

Setting:

Urban veterans affairs (va) medical center and nursing home care unit (nhcu).

Participants:

Patients older than age 50 admitted consecutively to a va nhcu between july 1991 and february 1993 who completed a structured interview, n = 117.

Main outcome measures:

Aud as determined by dsm-iii-r criteria. demographics, health services utilization and mortality as abstracted from the va medical record.

Results:

Health service utilization as measured by care episodes was not significantly different in the three groups (active, inactive and no aud), but subjects with aud had documented health services use related to alcoholism, including hospitalizations for alcohol-related illness, placements in long-term care facilities to control drinking and death from alcohol-related causes. the mean age at death was significantly younger for study participants with active or inactive aud compared to those with no aud: 67.7, 70.4 and 77.9 years, respectively (p < 0.004). of the 21 participants with active aud at nhcu entry, 11 resumed drinking after discharge and six still met criteria for active aud 3 years later.

Conclusions:

The subset of nhcu patients with active aud continued to incur alcohol-related hospitalizations and institutionalizations following nhcu discharge and suffered early mortality relative to their peers. effective models of care for this subset of patients should be sought.


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