[Early indicators of prolonged hospitalization of the elderly: pilot study at Strasbourg University Hospital]
Fiche publication
Date publication
mars 2007
Auteurs
Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr JOLLY Damien, Pr MEYER Nicolas
Tous les auteurs :
Lang PO, Heitz D, Meyer N, Drame M, Jovenin N, Ankri J, Somme D, Novella JL, Gauvain JB, Colvez A, Couturier P, Laniece I, Voisin T, de Wazieres B, Gonthier R, Jeandel C, Jolly D, Saint-Jean O, Blanchard F
Lien Pubmed
Résumé
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to identify early indicators of prolonged hospital stays by elderly patients. METHODS: This prospective pilot study, conducted at Strasbourg University Hospital, included patients aged 75 years or older who were hospitalized via the emergency department (SAFES cohort: Sujet Age Fragile: Evaluation et suivi, that is, Frail Elderly Subjects: Evaluation and Follow-up). A gerontologic evaluation of these patients during the first week of their hospitalization furnished the data for an exact logistic regression. Two definitions were used for prolonged hospitalization: 30 days and a composite number adjusted for diagnosis-related group according to the French classification (f-DRG). RESULTS: The analysis examined 137 hospitalizations. More than two thirds of the patients were women (73%), with a mean age of 84 years. Twenty-four hospitalizations (17%) lasted more than 30 days, but only 6 (4%) lasted beyond the DRG-adjusted limit. No social or demographic variables appeared to affect the length of stay, regardless of the definition of prolonged stay. No indicator was associated with the 30-day limit, but clinical markers were linked to prolongation assessed by f-DRG adjustment. A "risk of malnutrition" (OR=14.07) and "mood disorders" (OR=2,5) were both early markers for prolonged hospitalization. Although not statistically significant, "walking difficulties" (OR=2.72) and "cognitive impairment" (OR=5.03) appeared to be associated with prolonged stays. No association was seen with either the variables measured by Katz's Activities of Daily Living Index or its course during hospitalization. CONCLUSION: Our study shows that when generally recognized indicators of frailty are taken into account, a set of simple items enables a predictive approach to the prolongation of emergency hospitalizations of the elderly.
Référence
Presse Med. 2007 Mar;36(3 Pt 1):389-98