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The Moderating Effect of Caregiver Engagement in Transitional Care Intervention Outcomes: A Meta-Analysis

As chronically ill adults age, increased fluctuations in health status result in frequent care transitions. Caregiver engagement is often a core component of evidence-based transitional care interventions, yet little is known about the relative contribution of this element to observed outcomes. This...

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Published in:Innovation in aging 2021-12, Vol.5 (Supplement_1), p.356-356
Main Authors: Levoy, Kristin, Rivera, Eleanor, McHugh, Molly, Hanlon, Alexandra, Hirschman, Karen, Naylor, Mary
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container_issue Supplement_1
container_start_page 356
container_title Innovation in aging
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creator Levoy, Kristin
Rivera, Eleanor
McHugh, Molly
Hanlon, Alexandra
Hirschman, Karen
Naylor, Mary
description As chronically ill adults age, increased fluctuations in health status result in frequent care transitions. Caregiver engagement is often a core component of evidence-based transitional care interventions, yet little is known about the relative contribution of this element to observed outcomes. This meta-analysis aimed to synthesize evidence of caregiver engagement in randomized control trials (RCT’s) of transitional care interventions, estimate the overall intervention effects on all-cause hospital readmissions, and test caregiver engagement as a moderator of interventions’ effects. Relative risk was the effect size, and the overall effect was estimated using inverse variance weighting. Fifty-four studies met criteria, representing 31,399 participants and 65 effect sizes. The weighted sample mean age was 64 years. The majority (64%) of interventions targeted participants with specific diagnoses, such as heart disease, but more than half (54%) lacked caregiver engagement components. Among all reviewed studies of transitional care interventions, the overall effect on all-cause readmissions at 1 month was non-significant (p=.123, k=28). However, intervention effects at 2 or more months were significant (RR=0.89, 95% CI: 0.82, 0.97, p=.007, k=26), indicating a 12% reduction in the relative risk of all-cause readmissions among intervention participants compared to controls. Caregiver engagement was found to moderate intervention effects (p=.05). Specifically, interventions that included caregiver engagement produced more robust effects (RR=0.83, 95% CI: 0.75, 0.92, p=.001), than those without such engagement (RR=0.97, 95% CI: 0.87, 1.08, p=.550). Findings suggest that transitional care interventions need to more explicitly engage caregivers as active partners in order to optimize patient outcomes.
doi_str_mv 10.1093/geroni/igab046.1382
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title The Moderating Effect of Caregiver Engagement in Transitional Care Intervention Outcomes: A Meta-Analysis
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