Hospital Re-Admission High For Dialysis Patients Treated In Long-Term Care Hospitals
A new study by University of Cincinnati (UC) nephrologists shows that most dialysis patients admitted to long-term care hospitals face readmission to acute care facilities, and those with acute kidney failure don’t often recover full kidney function.
This study is being published in the advanced online edition of the American Journal of Kidney Diseases, the official journal of the National Kidney Foundation.
“Acute kidney failure occurs when the kidneys partly or completely lose their ability to filter water and remove waste from the blood,” says Charuhas Thakar, MD, associate professor of medicine at UC and chief of the renal section at the Cincinnati Veterans Affairs Medical Center. “It occurs in about 5 percent of all hospitalized patients and is even more common in those receiving intensive care.”
Thakar says it is known that dialysis patients who are discharged from acute care hospitals are more likely to have been critically ill and are good candidates for long-term care hospitalization during the recovery phase of their illness.
A long-term care hospital provides recuperative care after brief (acute care) hospitalizations for medically complex patients who are not stable enough to be discharged home or to be transferred to a nursing home.
Thakar led a two-year study of 206 hemodialysis patients at Drake Center, a long-term care facility. Forty-five percent of the patients studied had experienced acute kidney failure.
Researchers found that within acute kidney failure cases, only 30 percent of patients recovered enough to come off of dialysis; 70 percent remained dialysis dependent and were deemed to have end-stage kidney failure.
In addition, the majority of these dialysis patients returned to the hospital, died or were placed in a nursing home following their stay at Drake Center.
“We frequently encounter questions from physicians and families of dialysis patients about the outcome of their loved ones during their stay at long-term care facilities,” he continues. “This study gives us a clearer idea about what happens to these patients.”
He says there has been a tremendous growth in long-term care hospitals within the last decade, contributing to the growing economic burden faced by the health care system.
“Currently, there are over 300 long-term care hospital facilities across the U.S.,” he says. “However, there are virtually no detailed studies about the outcomes of dialysis patients in these facilities.”
Thakar says doctors are unsure of the role dialysis plays in the recovery of acute kidney injury patients, but he notes that these findings provide a direct link between acute kidney failure and end-stage kidney disease.
“The majority of dialysis patients who come to Drake Center are very ill and often get readmitted to the hospital,” he says. “We speculate that finding new avenues to improve dialysis care may help in lowering the morbidity in these patients. For example, if we reduce the rate of re-hospitalization, it would prove to have a big impact on individual patient care as well as the health care system.”
He adds that these findings will give physicians direction for the care of this subgroup of patients.
“This information will allow us to more accurately predict the outcomes for the dialysis patients who are admitted to long-term care facilities like Drake Center,” he says, adding that limitations in the study include the fact that the study looks at only those dialysis patients who were discharged from hospitals to a long-term care facility. “But even by looking at this narrow spectrum of patients, we are still examining a huge part of our health care system today and are helping find ways to improve care.”
The study was co-authored by physicians and scientists from UC’s department of internal medicine and department of public health sciences.
Drake Center is a comprehensive care center that offers a variety of services for patients recovering from complex medical problems including patients on artificial respirators, trauma, stroke or spinal cord injury.
Source: Katie Pence
University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center
source : www.medicalnewstoday.com
Do your friends think you are stupid? Take the challenge and prove them wrong!
Get 5 Books for 99 cents!
The most popular books at the most popular prices!
Home Income Profit System
You can make money working from the comfort of your own home!
Gevalia Stainless Steel Bundle
Save 75% on this Coffee Bundle When You Try Gevalia!
CreditReport.com
Get your credit report and score in just seconds!
Related News:
- Subretinal Implant Restores Unprecedented Level Of Vision To Blind Patients
- Acucela And Otsuka Pharmaceutical Receive FDA Fast Track Designation For ACU-4429 In Patients With Dry AMD
- SNM Warns Patients About Imaging Test Delays Due To Worldwide Mo-99 Shortage
- ACC: No Benefit from Ventricular Reconstruction (CME/CE)
- ACC: Intensive Statin Tx Cuts CVEs in Kidney Disease Patients (CME/CE)
- Patients With Long-Term Conditions Need Greater Support To Return To Work, England
- Nurses Clarify Skin Care Advice For Radiotherapy Patients
- Insufficiency Fractures After Pelvic Radiotherapy In Patients With Prostate Cancer
- Heart transplant patients face greater risk of skin cancer
- ACC: STEMI Patients Helped by Aspirating the Clot
Details :
Submited at Monday, December 21st, 2009 at 7:00 pm on Urology by madison
Comment RSS 2.0 - leave a comment - trackback
















