Abstract

This retrospective study will assess the extent to which multidisciplinary case management in the form of virtual wards (VWs) leads to changes in the use of health care and social care by patients at high risk of future unplanned hospital admission. VWs use the staffing, systems and daily routines of a hospital ward to deliver coordinated care to patients in their own homes. Admission to a VW is offered to patients identified by a predictive risk model as being at high risk of unplanned hospital admission in the coming 12 months. We will compare the health care and social care use of VW patients to that of matched controls. Controls will be drawn from (a) national, and (b) local, individual-level pseudonymous routine data. The costs of setting up and running a VW will be determined from the perspectives of both health and social care organizations using a combination of administrative data, interviews and diaries. Using propensity score matching and prognostic matching, we will create matched comparator groups to estimate the effect size of virtual wards in reducing unplanned hospital admissions. THIS STUDY WILL ALLOW US TO DETERMINE RELATIVE TO MATCHED COMPARATOR GROUPS: whether VWs reduce the use of emergency hospital care;the impact, if any, of VWs on the uptake of primary care, community health services and council-funded social care; and the potential costs and savings of VWs from the perspectives of the national health service (NHS) and local authorities.

Highlights

  • This retrospective study will assess the extent to which multidisciplinary case management in the form of virtual wards (VWs) leads to changes in the use of health care and social care by patients at high risk of future unplanned hospital admission

  • The costs of setting up and running a VW will be determined from the perspectives of both health and social care organizations using a combination of administrative data, interviews and diaries

  • This study will allow us to determine relative to matched comparator groups: whether VWs reduce the use of emergency hospital care; the impact, if any, of VWs on the uptake of primary care, community health services and council-funded social care; and the potential costs and savings of VWs from the perspectives of the national health service (NHS) and local authorities

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Summary

Background

35 per cent of hospital admissions in England are classified as emergency admissions, costing approximately £11 billion a year [1]. The current study will use the example of virtual wards [18, 19], which aim to integrate primary, community and social care at the meso (service delivery) and micro (clinical) levels. It will explore the cost-effectiveness of this type of integrated, multidisciplinary case management in reducing emergency hospital admissions for patients at high predicted risk, as well as any impact on social care services. There are several reasons why integrated, multidisciplinary preventive care might be beneficial to high-risk patients Such patients are typically older people with multiple chronic conditions and complex health and social needs. This suggests that an index for caseload targets needs to be developed [27]

Research methods
October 2008–1 September 2010 106
Findings
Summary
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