Author/Authors :
P.-O. LANG1، نويسنده , , 2، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Background: Dementia is a serious, chronic, and costly public health problem. Prior studies have
described dementia as increasing length of hospital stay, but so far no explanations have been proposed.
Methods: To identify early markers for prolonged hospital stay in demented elderly inpatients, 178 communitydwelling
or institutionalized subjects aged 75+, hospitalized through an emergency department in 9 teaching
hospitals in France, were analyzed. Prolonged hospital stays were defined according a limit adjusted for
Diagnosis Related Group. All patients underwent a comprehensive geriatric assessment at admission. Logistic
regression multifactorial mixed model was performed. Center effect was considered as a random effect. Results:
Of the 178 stays, 52 were prolonged. Most concerned community-dwelling patients (86%). Multifactor analysis
demonstrated that demographic variables had no influence on the length of stay, while diagnosis of delirium (OR
2.31; 95% CI 1.77 – 2.91), walking difficulties (OR 1.94; 95% CI 1.62 – 2.43) and report by the informal
caregiver of moderate or severe burden (OR 1.52; 95% CI 1.19 – 1.86) or low social quality-of-life score (OR
1.25; 95% CI 1.03 – 1.40), according to the Zarit’s Burden Inventory short scale (12 items) and the Duke’s
Health Profile respectively, were identified as early markers for prolonged hospital stays. Conclusion: At the time
of the rising incidence of cognitive disorders, these results suggest that preventive approaches might be possible.
In a hospital setting as well as in a community-dwelling population, more specific, specialized and coordinated
care, using the expertise of multiple disciplines appears as a probable effective measure to limit prolonged
hospital stay. Such approaches require (i) clear patient-oriented goal definition, (ii) understanding and
appreciation of roles among various health care and social disciplines and, (iii) cooperation between partners in
patient’s management. However, the cost- and health-effectiveness of such approaches should be evaluated.
Keywords :
SAFEs cohort , Prolonged hospital stay , dementia , ELDERLY