Abstract
ABSTRACTBackground: Improved risk factor management and interventions have both been shown to improve mortality in stroke patients. Although this has been a success for acute care, it has placed a higher burden on stroke rehabilitation resources.Objectives: This study sought to identify the pre-stroke rehabilitation admission factors that best predict personal care home discharge.Methods: Using a retrospective case-control, chart review design, 60 patients discharged to personal care homes from inpatient stroke rehabilitation between 2008 and 2017 were included. One hundred and eighty-two patients discharged home over the same time span were randomly selected as controls. Statistical analysis was used to identify patient factors independently associated with discharge destination.Results: Patients were more often discharged to personal care homes if they were older (OR 1.09; CI [1.05–1.15]), had a lower functional independence measure score (OR 0.95; CI [0.92–0.97]), had cognitive deficits (OR 6.19; CI [2.37–18.06]), lived alone before their stroke (OR 7.77; CI [2.75–24.55]), and whether or not there was excessive truncal instability limiting Berg balance scale measurability (OR 0.17; CI [0.06–0.45] if able to measure). Combined, the predictive value of personal care home discharge using these variables was 91.6%.Conclusions: A combination of age, admission functional independence measure, cognitive impairment, pre-stroke living situation, and measurability of the Berg balance scale on admission to stroke rehabilitation were highly predictive of eventual personal care home discharge.
Published Version
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