DOI: 10.3390/ecm3030020 ISSN: 2813-7914

Reducing Geriatric Emergency Department Attendances from a Telehealth-Based Acute Care Programme in Nursing Homes: Estimating Inpatient Bed-Day Savings in a Singapore Tertiary Hospital

Angus Ng, Chong Ong, Yijun Lim, Jean Lee

Background/Objectives: Nursing home (NH) residents who become acutely unwell may frequently be conveyed to emergency departments (EDs). However, at least half of such low-acuity visits could be avoided. Telehealth-supported acute care programmes may potentially reduce unnecessary ED attendances and subsequent hospital utilization. This study aimed to describe a telehealth-based acute care programme for NH residents and to explore a pragmatic method for estimating potential inpatient bed-day savings using publicly available diagnosis-related group (DRG)-based average-length-of-stay (ALOS) data. Methods: A telehealth-based programme was implemented at Sengkang General Hospital (SKH) to support NH staff in the management of acutely unwell residents. NH residents were prospectively tracked for ED non-attendance within 14 days following teleconsultation. Potential inpatient bed-day savings were estimated by mapping teleconsultation diagnoses to relevant DRGs and referencing Singapore Ministry of Health Hospital Bill Size and Fee Benchmarks. Institution-specific and nationally derived ALOS estimates were compared using exploratory Bland–Altman agreement analysis. Results: Over two financial year periods, seven NHs participated in the programme. A total of 726 teleconsultations were conducted, of which 424 encounters were successfully managed within NHs without ED attendance within 14 days (ED non-attendance rate being 58.4%). Using DRG-based estimation, the projected inpatient bed-day savings for FY2023 were 694.31 days using institution-specific ALOS and 805.42 days using nationally derived ALOS estimates. Exploratory Bland–Altman analysis across 34 mapped diagnostic categories demonstrated a mean bias of 0.098 days (approximately 2.4 h), with 95% limits of agreement ranging from −1.31 to +1.51 days. Conclusions: The acute care programme may reduce ED attendances and hospitalizations among NH residents. Publicly available national DRG-based ALOS data may provide a pragmatic approach for estimating the potential inpatient hospital bed-day savings when institution-specific data are unavailable.

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