Abstract

BackgroundHealth-related quality of life (HRQoL) has been used to assess subjects’ prognosis and recovery following hip fracture. However, evidence is mixed regarding the effectiveness of interventions to improve HRQoL of elders with hip fracture. The purposes of this study were to identify distinct HRQoL trajectories and to evaluate the effects of two care models on these trajectories over 12 months following hip-fracture surgery.MethodsFor this secondary analysis, data came from a randomized controlled trial of subjects with hip fracture receiving three treatment care models: interdisciplinary care (n = 97), comprehensive care (n = 91), and usual care (n = 93). Interdisciplinary care consisted of geriatric consultation, discharge planning, and 4 months of in-home rehabilitation. Comprehensive care consisted of interdisciplinary care plus management of malnutrition and depressive symptoms, fall prevention, and 12 months of in-home rehabilitation. Usual care included only in-hospital rehabilitation and occasional discharge planning, without geriatric consultation and in-home rehabilitation. Mental and physical HRQoL were measured at 1, 3, 6, and 12 months after discharge by the physical component summary scale (PCS) and mental component summary scale (MCS), respectively, of the Medical Outcomes Study Short Form 36, Taiwan version. Latent class growth modeling was used to identify PCS and MCS trajectories and to evaluate how they were affected by the interdisciplinary and comprehensive care models.ResultsWe identified three quadratic PCS trajectories: poor PCS (n = 103, 36.6 %), moderate PCS (n = 96, 34.2 %), and good PCS (n = 82, 29.2 %). In contrast, we found three linear MCS trajectories: poor MCS (n = 39, 13.9 %), moderate MCS (n = 84, 29.9 %), and good MCS (n = 158, 56.2 %). Subjects in the comprehensive care and interdisciplinary care groups were more likely to experience a good PCS trajectory (b = 0.99, odds ratio [OR] = 2.69, confidence interval [CI] = 7.24–1.00, p = 0.049, and b = 1.32, OR = 3.75, CI = 10.53–1.33, p = 0.012, respectively) than those who received usual care. However, neither care model improved MCS.ConclusionsThe interdisciplinary and comprehensive care models improved recovery from hip fracture by increasing subjects’ odds for following a trajectory of good physical functioning after hospitalization.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01350557)

Highlights

  • Health-related quality of life (HRQoL) has been used to assess subjects’ prognosis and recovery following hip fracture

  • This inconsistency in intervention benefits on HRQoL might have been due to the course of changes in HRQoL after hip fracture being averaged over patients

  • In an earlier study of elderly patients with hip fracture, we developed an interdisciplinary care model consisting of geriatric consultation, discharge planning, and 4 months of in-home rehabilitation in addition to usual care and found this model effective in improving HRQoL of older persons with hip fracture [8]

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Summary

Introduction

Health-related quality of life (HRQoL) has been used to assess subjects’ prognosis and recovery following hip fracture. Evidence is mixed regarding the effectiveness of interventions to improve the HRQoL of elders with hip fracture [2,3,4]; some studies found beneficial effects [2, 4] and some did not [3]. In an earlier study of elderly patients with hip fracture, we developed an interdisciplinary care model consisting of geriatric consultation, discharge planning, and 4 months of in-home rehabilitation in addition to usual care and found this model effective in improving HRQoL of older persons with hip fracture [8]. Comparison of the intervention effects of the comprehensive and interdisciplinary care models to usual care showed that both models improved HRQoL of older persons with hip fracture, especially physical health-related outcomes (effect size = 0.3, 95 % CI =0.02–0.58 at 12 months after discharge) [9]

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