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Redefining avoidable and inappropriate admissions.
Clubbs Coldron, B; MacRury, S; Coates, V; Khamis, A.
Afiliação
  • Clubbs Coldron B; University of Highlands and Islands, Division of Rural Health and Wellbeing, Centre for Health Science, Old Perth Road, Inverness, IV2 3JH, UK. Electronic address: Benjamin.ClubbsColdron@uhi.ac.uk.
  • MacRury S; University of Highlands and Islands, Division of Rural Health and Wellbeing, Centre for Health Science, Old Perth Road, Inverness, IV2 3JH, UK; Raigmore Hospital, Old Perth Road, Inverness, IV2 3UJ, UK.
  • Coates V; School of Nursing, Ulster University, Northland Road, Derry, BT48 7JL, UK; Western Health and Social Care Trust, Altnagelvin Area Hospital, Glenshane Road Londonderry, BT47 6SB, UK.
  • Khamis A; Letterkenny University Hospital, Kilmacrennan Rd, Ballyboe Glencar, Letterkenny, Co. Donegal, F92 AE81, Ireland; National University of Ireland, Galway, University Road, Galway, H91 CF50, Ireland.
Public Health ; 202: 66-73, 2022 Jan.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34906791
ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES:

Focusing on policy discourse in the United Kingdom, we examine the chain of causation that is characteristic of the ways in which the concepts of avoidability and inappropriateness are defined and used in these contexts. With a particular focus on diabetes complications, we aim to elucidate the way in which avoidable admission to hospital is conceptualised, measured, and applied to policy development and implementation and build a more inclusive model of identification as a basis for further research in this area. STUDY

DESIGN:

Discourse analysis was used in combination with a scoping review.

METHODS:

We searched the online databases of the UK Houses of Parliament Hansard, Official reports of the Northern Ireland Assembly and transcripts of the Scottish Parliament in October 2021. We also conducted an electronic search in October 2021 on MEDLINE, PubMed, Google Scholar, EMBASE, CINAHL and The Cochrane Library to review the available literature. In addition, an analysis of policies in place in Scotland, England and Northern Ireland relating to urgent diabetes care was conducted.

RESULTS:

'Avoidable' and 'inappropriate' hospital admissions are categories used in health policy and practice internationally as ways of identifying targets for interventions intending to reduce the burden of care. Diabetes mellitus is a chronic condition that is often seen as a costly and avoidable use of health care services and so is a frequent target of such policies. Avoidable admission is interpreted as having a very long chain of causation. The assumption is that people requiring unscheduled hospital admission could have taken steps to prevent the onset of diabetes, or associated complications, arising in the first place. Definitions focus on primary and secondary prevention and largely place responsibility on the individual and their behaviour rather than on structural or social factors. Inadequate or inappropriate care prehospital or in the emergency department is seldom considered as a potential cause of avoidable admissions. Procedural definitions of avoidable admission are proposed whereby health care professionals and people living with diabetes collaborate to identify avoidable admissions in clinical audit rather than using statistical rates of avoidable admission within isolation in policy development and implementation.

CONCLUSIONS:

Avoidability and inappropriateness are characteristics of cases in which conduct of the individual or attendant health care professionals was a proximate cause of hospital admission, and but for such conduct, admission could have been avoided. This process of definition seeks to provide a basis for contextualised and considered evaluation of where there are problems in care and where there are reasonable opportunities for prevention.
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Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Serviço Hospitalar de Emergência / Hospitalização Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2022 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Serviço Hospitalar de Emergência / Hospitalização Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2022 Tipo de documento: Article