Guest guest Posted December 11, 2002 Report Share Posted December 11, 2002 Our results suggest that a general practice-based intervention such as coordinated care may be the wrong approach for people with chronic respiratory disease. Many patients with advanced respiratory disease may be so ill that coordinated care can have little effect on the course of the illness, the patient's well being, or healthcare service utilisation. It is difficult for large community studies such as the coordinated care trials to target specific subgroups of the population with chronic respiratory disease owing to the large participant numbers that such studies require. It may be better in future to focus on locally targeted programs, such as pulmonary rehabilitation. Pulmonary rehabilitation has demonstrated benefits in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease,22 and a home-based program could be incorporated with home-based management to improve future coordinated care interventions for respiratory disease. A Cochrane review of a large, well-designed outreach nursing care study for patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease2 also showed only modest improvements in quality of life, accompanied by a substantial increase in healthcare system costs.23 Congruent findings have been demonstrated in a locally conducted outreach respiratory nurse program, and by a systematic review of 15 studies of preventive home care visits in elderly patients.24 The value of modest increases in quality of life in people with complex and chronic conditions, for substantial increase in healthcare costs, needs to be considered at a societal level. Given the many difficulties reported with coordinated care in this study and the lack of cost benefits, the future of wide-ranging coordinated care interventions looks limited. Since the introduction in 2001 of the Enhanced Primary Care items to the MBS (for health assessments, care plans and case conferences), it is unclear whether the revised costs of coordinated care will still outweigh any demonstrated benefits, but the problems encountered in this study are likely to hinder future attempts to show an overall benefit. 1: Flow diagram of participation in the study by the intervention and comparison groups 2: Percentage of patients who showed improvement or deterioration in functionality and quality of life* Control © (usual care) Intervention (I) (coordinated care) P †DeterioratedSameImprovedDeterioratedSameImproved SF-36 physical (n = 150; C, 67; I, 83)15%73%12%13%72%15%0.627 SF-36 mental (n = 150; C, 67; I, 83)24%66%10%16%59%25%0.023 MBI (n = 147; C, 59; I, 88)7%80%13%23%68%9%0.080 OARS (n = 150; C, 61; I, 89)25%52%23%28%42%30%0.226 COOP Physical condition (n = 159; C, 65; I, 94)29%48%23%21%63%16%0.528 Daily activities (n = 160; C, 65; I, 95)28%46%26%31%46%23%0.785 Social activities (n = 159; C, 65; I, 94)37%43%20%32%46%22%0.162 Emotional (n = 160; C, 65; I, 95)46%31%23%24%51%25%0.008 Breathlessness (n = 158; C, 65; I, 93)29%52%19%25%54%22%0.162 Pain (n = 160; C, 65; I, 95)43%29%28%21%54%25%0.031 Overall condition (n = 160; C, 65; I, 95)37%35%28%19%51%31%0.072 Quality of life (n = 160; C, 65; I, 95)31%49%20%21%49%29%0.030 Social support (n = 160; C, 65; I, 95)22%60%18%11%68%21%0.076 * Improvement or deterioration means a change in SF-36 score of 12 or more, and a change of one unit on the five-item COOP and MBI scales and on the 15-item OARS scale. †Except for the SF-36 comparisons, P values are adjusted for MBS expenditure in the previous 12 months, age, sex, smoking and hospitalisation in the previous 12 months. 3: Recalibrated costs per patient-year for coordinated care and usual care Usual careCoordinated careDifferenceRecalibration factor Becki YOUR FAVORITE LilGooberGirl YOUNGLUNG EMAIL SUPPORT LIST www.topica.com/lists/younglung Pediatric Interstitial Lung Disease Society http://groups.yahoo.com/group/InterstitialLung_Kids/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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