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Profiling chronic diseases and hospitalizations in older home care recipients: a nationwide cohort study in Sweden

Older adults with home care (HC) often have complex disease patterns and use healthcare extensively. Increased understanding is necessary to tailor their care. To our knowledge, this is the first study to describe patterns of morbidity and hospitalizations among community-dwelling older HC recipient...

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Published in:BMC geriatrics 2024-04, Vol.24 (1), p.312-312, Article 312
Main Authors: Schmidt-Mende, Katharina, Arvinge, Cecilia, Cioffi, Giovanni, Gustafsson, Lars Lennart, Modig, Karin, Meyer, Anna Carina
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description Older adults with home care (HC) often have complex disease patterns and use healthcare extensively. Increased understanding is necessary to tailor their care. To our knowledge, this is the first study to describe patterns of morbidity and hospitalizations among community-dwelling older HC recipients nationwide and in subgroups defined by age, sex, and amount of HC, and to compare patterns to community-dwelling older adults without HC. Nationwide register-based cohort study in community-dwelling adults aged 70 and older receiving publicly funded HC in Sweden on January 1st 2019 and an age-and-sex matched comparison group ("non-HC recipients"). Using register data from inpatient and specialized outpatient care, we assessed the prevalence of sixty chronic diseases, frailty, multimorbidity and hospitalizations, calculated incidence rates and explored reasons for hospitalizations during two years of follow-up. We identified 138,113 HC recipients (mean age 85, 66% women, 57% ≥5 chronic diseases). The most prevalent diseases were hypertension (55%) and eye conditions (48%). Compared to non-HC recipients, HC recipients had a higher prevalence of almost all diseases, with an overrepresentation of neurological (26.1 vs. 9.5%) disease and dementia (9.3 vs. 1.5%). 61% of HC recipients were hospitalized at least once during two years, which was 1.6 times as often as non-HC recipients. One third of HC recipients´ hospitalizations (37.4%) were due to injuries, infections, and heart failure. Hospitalizations for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, confusion, infections, and breathing difficulties were 3-5 times higher among HC recipients compared to non-HC recipients. Compared to non-HC recipients, HC recipients more often live alone, have higher degrees of frailty, suffer from more chronic diseases, especially neurological disease, and are hospitalized almost twice as often. The results provide a thorough description of HC recipients, which might be useful for targeted healthcare interventions including closer collaboration between primary care, neurologists, and rehabilitation.
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subjects Age
Aged
Aged patients
Analysis
Care and treatment
Chronic diseases
Chronic illnesses
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Cohort analysis
Committees
Comorbidity
Congestive heart failure
Dementia
Dementia disorders
Diagnosis
Epidemiology
Evaluation
Frailty
Gender differences
Health aspects
Health care
Heart failure
Home care
Hospitalization
Hospitals
Hypertension
Lung diseases
Lung diseases, Obstructive
Medical research
Medicin och hälsovetenskap
Medicine, Experimental
Morbidity
Multimorbidity
Nervous system diseases
Neurological diseases
Older people
Population
Primary care
Primary health care
Womens health
title Profiling chronic diseases and hospitalizations in older home care recipients: a nationwide cohort study in Sweden
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