Development, validation and testing of a nursing home to emergency room transfer checklist

Aims and objectives To develop and test the feasibility of an instrument to support patients’ nursing home to emergency room transfer. Background Transfers from a nursing home care facility to an acute care facility such as a hospital emergency room are common. However, the prevalence of an informat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical nursing 2018-01, Vol.27 (1-2), p.115-122
Hauptverfasser: Tsai, Hsiu‐Hsin, Tsai, Yun‐Fang
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Aims and objectives To develop and test the feasibility of an instrument to support patients’ nursing home to emergency room transfer. Background Transfers from a nursing home care facility to an acute care facility such as a hospital emergency room are common. However, the prevalence of an information gap for transferring residents’ health data to acute care facility is high. An evidence‐based transfer instrument, which could fill this gap, is lacking. Design Development of a nursing home to emergency room transfer checklist, validation of items using the Delphi method and testing the feasibility and benefits of using the nursing home to emergency room transfer checklist. Methods Items were developed based on qualitative data from previous research. Delphi validation, retrospective chart review (baseline data) and a 6‐month prospective study design were applied to test the feasibility of using the checklist. Variables for testing the feasibility of the checklist included residents’ 30‐day readmission rate and length of hospital stay. Results Development of the nursing home to emergency room transfer checklist resulted in four main parts: (i) demographic data of the nursing home resident; (ii) critical data for nursing home to emergency room transfer; (iii) contact information and (iv) critical data for emergency room to nursing home transfer. Two rounds of Delphi validation resulted in a mean score (standard deviation) ranging from 4.39 (1.13)–4.98 (.15). Time required to complete the checklist was 3–5 min. Use of the nursing home to emergency room transfer checklist resulted in a 30‐day readmission rate of 13.4%, which was lower than the baseline rate of 15.9%. Conclusions The nursing home to emergency room transfer checklist was developed for transferring nursing home residents to an emergency room. The instrument was found to be an effective tool for this process. Relevance to clinical practice Use of the nursing home to emergency room transfer checklist for nursing home transfers could fill the information gap that exists when transferring older adults between facilities such as nursing homes and hospitals.
ISSN:0962-1067
1365-2702
DOI:10.1111/jocn.13853