Components of the transitional care model (TCM) to reduce readmission in geriatric patients: a systematic review

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RESEARCH ARTICLE

Open Access

Components of the transitional care model (TCM) to reduce readmission in geriatric patients: a systematic review Nadine Morkisch1, Luz D. Upegui-Arango1,2, Maria I. Cardona3, Dirk van den Heuvel1, Martina Rimmele3, Cornel Christian Sieber3,4 and Ellen Freiberger3*

Abstract Background: Demographic changes are taking place in most industrialized countries. Geriatric patients are defined by the European Union of Medical Specialists as aged over 65 years and suffering from frailty and multi-morbidity, whose complexity puts a major burden on these patients, their family caregivers and the public health care system. To counteract negative outcomes and to maintain consistency in care between hospital and community dwelling, the transitional of care has emerged over the last several decades. Our objectives were to identify and summarize the components of the Transitional Care Model implemented with geriatric patients (aged over 65 years, with multimorbidity) for the reduction of all-cause readmission. Another objective was to recognize the Transitional Care Model components’ role and impact on readmission rate reduction on the transition of care from hospital to community dwelling (not nursing homes). Methods: Randomized controlled trials (sample size ≥50 participants per group; intervention period ≥30 days), with geriatric patients were included. Electronic databases (MEDLINE, CINAHL, PsycINFO and The Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials) were searched from January 1994 to December 2019 published in English or German. A qualitative synthesis of the findings as well as a systematic assessment of the interventions intensities was performed. Results: Three articles met the inclusion criteria. One of the included trials applied all of the nine Transitional Care Model components described by Hirschman and colleagues and obtained a high-intensity level of intervention in the intensities assessment. This and another trial reported reductions in the readmission rate (p < 0.05), but the third trial did not report significant differences between the groups in the longer follow-up period (up to 12 months). Conclusions: Our findings suggest that high intensity multicomponent and multidisciplinary interventions are likely to be effective reducing readmission rates in geriatric patients, without increasing cost. Components such as type of staffing, assessing and managing symptoms, educating and promoting self-management, maintaining relationships and fostering coordination seem to have an important role in reducing the readmission rate. Research is needed to perform further investigations addressing geriatric patients well above 65 years old, to further understand the importance of individual components of the TCM in this population. Keywords: Systematic review, Transitional care, Transitional care model, Geriatric patients, Readmission

* Correspondence: [email protected] 3 Institute of Biomedicine of Aging, Nuremberg, Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Kobergerstr. 60, 9