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Reducing ambulance conveyance for older people with and without dementia: evidence of the role of social care from a regional, year-long service evaluation using retrospective routine data

Reducing ambulance conveyance for older people with and without dementia: evidence of the role of social care from a regional, year-long service evaluation using retrospective routine data
Reducing ambulance conveyance for older people with and without dementia: evidence of the role of social care from a regional, year-long service evaluation using retrospective routine data

Introduction: Older people, especially those with dementia, have a high risk of deterioration following admission to hospital. More than 60% of older people attended by South Central Ambulance Service (SCAS) clinicians are conveyed to hospital, although many conveyances may not have been due to life-threatening conditions. We aimed to understand patterns of conveyance and alternative referral pathways used following ambulance attendance to an older person.

Methods: Service evaluation, using routinely collected, anonymised electronic records.

Participants: Electronic records of people aged ≥75 years for whom an ambulance was dispatched between April 2016 and March 2017 within the geographical boundaries of SCAS NHS Foundation Trust, who were alive on arrival of the ambulance. Conveyance rates are described according to patient and emergency-call characteristics. Logistic regression was used to produce adjusted odds ratios for conveyance. Alternative referral pathways used are described.

Results: Of 110,781 patients attended, 64% were conveyed to hospital. Factors associated with reduced odds of conveyance included out-of-hours calls (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) 0.82 [0.79-0.85]), living alone with a care package or with family plus care package (aOR 0.66 [0.62-0.69]; aOR 0.58 [0.54-0.62] respectively) and a record of dementia (0.91 [0.87-0.96]). Living in a nursing home was associated with an increased risk of conveyance (aOR 1.25 [1.15-1.36]). Patients with dementia with more income were significantly less likely to be conveyed than those with less income. Alternative referral services were used in 22% of non-conveyed patients, most commonly GP, out-of-hours and falls services.

Discussion: People aged ≥75 years have high rates of conveyance, which are influenced by factors such as out-of-hours calls, dementia and receipt of social care. Low use of alternative referral services may reflect limited availability or difficulty in access. A better understanding of how these factors influence ambulance clinician decision-making is integral to improvement of outcomes for older people.

1478-4726
58-69
Lofthouse-Jones, Chloe
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King, Philip
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Pocock, Helen
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Ramsay, Mary
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Jadzinski, Patryk
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England, Ed
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Taylor, Sarah
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Cavalier, Julian
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Fogg, Carole
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Lofthouse-Jones, Chloe
a16df794-edd2-42f4-bd7a-693afb2cfea6
King, Philip
f22f2cdd-202b-4836-8628-dee91c154387
Pocock, Helen
ba8e097b-d073-46b2-9669-96e8e4689abc
Ramsay, Mary
fc5b08fd-e9c9-419e-84a7-17c494b8d53d
Jadzinski, Patryk
be86d313-ca80-4f60-a058-924d25a6892b
England, Ed
67016311-bfbf-44d5-a9f4-b613a6f76a8d
Taylor, Sarah
44307e44-5d4d-4629-9c05-cf591d3e2b1d
Cavalier, Julian
252ca222-a6a5-4f52-b77b-1d3aa551204d
Fogg, Carole
42057537-d443-462a-8944-c804252c973b

Lofthouse-Jones, Chloe, King, Philip, Pocock, Helen, Ramsay, Mary, Jadzinski, Patryk, England, Ed, Taylor, Sarah, Cavalier, Julian and Fogg, Carole (2021) Reducing ambulance conveyance for older people with and without dementia: evidence of the role of social care from a regional, year-long service evaluation using retrospective routine data. British Paramedic Journal, 6 (3), 58-69. (doi:10.29045/14784726.2021.12.6.3.58).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction: Older people, especially those with dementia, have a high risk of deterioration following admission to hospital. More than 60% of older people attended by South Central Ambulance Service (SCAS) clinicians are conveyed to hospital, although many conveyances may not have been due to life-threatening conditions. We aimed to understand patterns of conveyance and alternative referral pathways used following ambulance attendance to an older person.

Methods: Service evaluation, using routinely collected, anonymised electronic records.

Participants: Electronic records of people aged ≥75 years for whom an ambulance was dispatched between April 2016 and March 2017 within the geographical boundaries of SCAS NHS Foundation Trust, who were alive on arrival of the ambulance. Conveyance rates are described according to patient and emergency-call characteristics. Logistic regression was used to produce adjusted odds ratios for conveyance. Alternative referral pathways used are described.

Results: Of 110,781 patients attended, 64% were conveyed to hospital. Factors associated with reduced odds of conveyance included out-of-hours calls (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) 0.82 [0.79-0.85]), living alone with a care package or with family plus care package (aOR 0.66 [0.62-0.69]; aOR 0.58 [0.54-0.62] respectively) and a record of dementia (0.91 [0.87-0.96]). Living in a nursing home was associated with an increased risk of conveyance (aOR 1.25 [1.15-1.36]). Patients with dementia with more income were significantly less likely to be conveyed than those with less income. Alternative referral services were used in 22% of non-conveyed patients, most commonly GP, out-of-hours and falls services.

Discussion: People aged ≥75 years have high rates of conveyance, which are influenced by factors such as out-of-hours calls, dementia and receipt of social care. Low use of alternative referral services may reflect limited availability or difficulty in access. A better understanding of how these factors influence ambulance clinician decision-making is integral to improvement of outcomes for older people.

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Lofthouse-Jones Social care and ambulance conveyance service evaluation - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 12 July 2021
Published date: 1 December 2021
Additional Information: © 2021 The Author(s).

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 452468
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452468
ISSN: 1478-4726
PURE UUID: f9ede3c1-682b-47e9-8c3a-1e85f688a449
ORCID for Carole Fogg: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3000-6185

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Date deposited: 11 Dec 2021 11:05
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:51

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Contributors

Author: Chloe Lofthouse-Jones
Author: Philip King
Author: Helen Pocock
Author: Mary Ramsay
Author: Patryk Jadzinski
Author: Ed England
Author: Sarah Taylor
Author: Julian Cavalier
Author: Carole Fogg ORCID iD

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