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Effect of telecare on use of health and social care services: findings from the Whole Systems Demonstrator cluster randomised trial

Effect of telecare on use of health and social care services: findings from the Whole Systems Demonstrator cluster randomised trial
Effect of telecare on use of health and social care services: findings from the Whole Systems Demonstrator cluster randomised trial
Objective: to assess the impact of telecare on the use of social and health care. Part of the evaluation of the Whole Systems Demonstrator trial.

Participants and setting: a total of 2,600 people with social care needs were recruited from 217 general practices in three areas in England.

Design: a cluster randomised trial comparing telecare with usual care, general practice being the unit of randomisation. Participants were followed up for 12 months and analyses were conducted as intention-to-treat.

Data sources: trial data were linked at the person level to administrative data sets on care funded at least in part by local authorities or the National Health Service.

Main outcome measures: the proportion of people admitted to hospital within 12 months. Secondary endpoints included mortality, rates of secondary care use (seven different metrics), contacts with general practitioners and practice nurses, proportion of people admitted to permanent residential or nursing care, weeks in domiciliary social care and notional costs.

Results: 46.8% of intervention participants were admitted to hospital, compared with 49.2% of controls. Unadjusted differences were not statistically significant (odds ratio: 0.90, 95% CI: 0.75–1.07, P = 0.211). They reached statistical significance after adjusting for baseline covariates, but this was not replicated when adjusting for the predictive risk score. Secondary metrics including impacts on social care use were not statistically significant.

Conclusions: telecare as implemented in the Whole Systems Demonstrator trial did not lead to significant reductions in service use, at least in terms of results assessed over 12 months.
0002-0729
Steventon, Adam
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Bardsley, Martin
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Billings, John
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Dixon, Jennifer
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Doll, Helen
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Beynon, Michelle
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Hirani, Shashi
e53ce614-f63c-48c7-a3ac-01bffdd57f7b
Cartwright, Martin
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Rixon, Lorna
a9040465-4f96-4ed0-bcf9-7c0b306d311b
Rapp, Martin
ca27effe-0f6e-4d9b-86e2-ccc75032f2dc
Henderson, Catherine
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Rogers, Anne
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Hendy, Jane
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Fitzpatrick, Ray
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Newman, Stanton
53c7fc63-1b0e-44a7-86bb-34c88c6e17e1
Steventon, Adam
981d487f-9382-4626-b0f8-dd27247de03b
Bardsley, Martin
b0971145-6fe5-435f-99cf-5e32608f567d
Billings, John
8879d530-51ba-4490-ab4e-c41d66ab1f30
Dixon, Jennifer
7bbc56ba-591a-45c6-84fd-2731fc235260
Doll, Helen
235c881b-5763-4866-8e6d-ba9862cd2405
Beynon, Michelle
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Hirani, Shashi
e53ce614-f63c-48c7-a3ac-01bffdd57f7b
Cartwright, Martin
4ebf65eb-c627-41f7-8c53-4f544011c91c
Rixon, Lorna
a9040465-4f96-4ed0-bcf9-7c0b306d311b
Rapp, Martin
ca27effe-0f6e-4d9b-86e2-ccc75032f2dc
Henderson, Catherine
36207292-2558-4ebe-89ef-6f68b3e3e395
Rogers, Anne
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Hendy, Jane
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Fitzpatrick, Ray
e8a93c39-1f5e-4a7d-bfc2-77cf6dd7435f
Newman, Stanton
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Steventon, Adam, Bardsley, Martin, Billings, John, Dixon, Jennifer, Doll, Helen, Beynon, Michelle, Hirani, Shashi, Cartwright, Martin, Rixon, Lorna, Rapp, Martin, Henderson, Catherine, Rogers, Anne, Hendy, Jane, Fitzpatrick, Ray and Newman, Stanton (2013) Effect of telecare on use of health and social care services: findings from the Whole Systems Demonstrator cluster randomised trial. Age and Ageing. (doi:10.1093/ageing/aft008).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: to assess the impact of telecare on the use of social and health care. Part of the evaluation of the Whole Systems Demonstrator trial.

Participants and setting: a total of 2,600 people with social care needs were recruited from 217 general practices in three areas in England.

Design: a cluster randomised trial comparing telecare with usual care, general practice being the unit of randomisation. Participants were followed up for 12 months and analyses were conducted as intention-to-treat.

Data sources: trial data were linked at the person level to administrative data sets on care funded at least in part by local authorities or the National Health Service.

Main outcome measures: the proportion of people admitted to hospital within 12 months. Secondary endpoints included mortality, rates of secondary care use (seven different metrics), contacts with general practitioners and practice nurses, proportion of people admitted to permanent residential or nursing care, weeks in domiciliary social care and notional costs.

Results: 46.8% of intervention participants were admitted to hospital, compared with 49.2% of controls. Unadjusted differences were not statistically significant (odds ratio: 0.90, 95% CI: 0.75–1.07, P = 0.211). They reached statistical significance after adjusting for baseline covariates, but this was not replicated when adjusting for the predictive risk score. Secondary metrics including impacts on social care use were not statistically significant.

Conclusions: telecare as implemented in the Whole Systems Demonstrator trial did not lead to significant reductions in service use, at least in terms of results assessed over 12 months.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 25 February 2013
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

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Local EPrints ID: 349193
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/349193
ISSN: 0002-0729
PURE UUID: 6654b4d9-ca3a-4098-9893-c95d2980f84c

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Date deposited: 26 Feb 2013 12:11
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 13:10

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Contributors

Author: Adam Steventon
Author: Martin Bardsley
Author: John Billings
Author: Jennifer Dixon
Author: Helen Doll
Author: Michelle Beynon
Author: Shashi Hirani
Author: Martin Cartwright
Author: Lorna Rixon
Author: Martin Rapp
Author: Catherine Henderson
Author: Anne Rogers
Author: Jane Hendy
Author: Ray Fitzpatrick
Author: Stanton Newman

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