Abstract

Abstract Introduction Moving into a care home is a significant, life-changing experience which occurs to address care needs which cannot be supported elsewhere. UK health policy recommends against moving into a care home from the acute hospital. However, this occurs in practice. Better understanding pathways into care homes could improve support for individuals and families, service planning and policymaking. Our aim was to characterise individuals who move-in to a care home from hospital and those moving-in from the community, identifying factors associated with moving-in from hospital. Method A retrospective observational cohort study was conducted involving adults moving into care homes in Scotland between 1/3/13-31/3/16 using the Scottish Care Home Census (SCHC), a national individual-level social care dataset. SCHC data were linked to routine data sources including hospital admissions, community prescribing and mortality. The data were split into those moving-in from hospital and those moving-in from the community. Descriptive statistics characterising the two groups were generated and multivariate regression undertaken to identify factors associated with moving-in from hospital. Results A total of 23,892 individuals were included in the analysis, of whom 13,564 (56.8%) moved-in from hospital. A third came directly from an acute hospital, with 57.7% from rehabilitation or community hospitals and 7.1% from inpatient psychiatry. Being male, receiving nursing care, high frailty risk, increasing numbers of hospital admissions and diagnoses of any fracture or stroke in the six months before moving-into the care home were all significant predictors of moving-in from hospital. Conclusions The population moving-in to care homes from hospital are clinical distinct from those moving-in from the community. National cross-sectoral data linkage of health and social care data is feasible, but the available data are dominated by health characteristics. There is an urgent need to operationalise other meaningful variables which shape care pathways to enhance understanding and evidence.

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