Abstract

Background: This study aimed to identify and examine systematic review evidence of health and social care interventions for the community-dwelling older population regarding unplanned hospital admissions, timely hospital discharge and patient well-being. Methods: A meta-review was conducted using Joanna Briggs and PRISMA guidance. A search strategy was developed: eight bibliographic medical and social science databases were searched, and references of included studies checked. Searches were restricted to OECD countries and to systematic reviews published between January 2013-March 2018. Data extraction and quality appraisal was undertaken by one reviewer with a random sample screened independently by two others. Results: Searches retrieved 21,233 records; using data mining techniques, we identified 8,720 reviews. Following title and abstract and full-paper screening, 71 systematic reviews were included: 62 quantitative, seven qualitative and two mixed methods reviews. There were 52 reviews concerned with healthcare interventions and 19 reviews concerned with social care interventions. This meta-review summarises the evidence and evidence gaps of nine broad types of health and social care interventions. It scrutinises the presence of research in combined health and social care provision, finding it lacking in both definition and detail given. This meta-review debates the overlap of some of the person-centred support provided by community health and social care provision. Research recommendations have been generated by this process for both primary and secondary research. Finally, it proposes that research recommendations can be delivered on an ongoing basis if meta-reviews are conducted as living systematic reviews. Conclusions: This meta-review provides evidence of the effect of health and social care interventions for the community-dwelling older population and identification of evidence gaps. It highlights the lack of evidence for combined health and social care interventions and for the impact of social care interventions on health care outcomes. Registration: PROSPERO ID CRD42018087534; registered on 15 March 2018.

Highlights

  • In a recent government report on the UK population, it is predicted that in 50 years’ time there will be an extra 8.2 million people aged 65 years and above in the UK

  • Overview There were 71 systematic reviews included in this meta-review: 62 quantitative reviews, seven qualitative reviews and two mixed methods reviews (Extended data, Appendix 3: PRISMA diagram12) 52 reviews were concerned with health care interventions, of which 46 were quantitative reviews and six were qualitative reviews. 19 reviews were concerned with social care interventions of which 16 were quantitative, two were mixed methods and one qualitative review

  • Systematic reviews of health care interventions focused on the older population [17], chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) [12], heart failure/atrial fibrillation [10] with a smaller number of reviews on stroke [2], dementia [1], Parkinson’s [1], vertebral compression fractures [1] and mixed chronic conditions [2]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In a recent government report on the UK population, it is predicted that in 50 years’ time there will be an extra 8.2 million people aged 65 years and above in the UK. This cohort will comprise over a quarter of the total UK population and equates to the current size of London. This study aimed to identify and examine systematic review evidence of health and social care interventions for the community-dwelling older population regarding unplanned hospital admissions, timely hospital discharge and patient well-being. This meta-review summarises the evidence and evidence gaps of nine broad types of Invited Reviewers version 1

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call