The Chelsea‐Village Program (CVP) is a long‐term home healthcare program for a largely isolated and impoverished frail homebound aged population, based at Saint Vincent's Hospital in New York City. Since January 1973, our CVP teams of physicians, nurses, and social workers have cared for the homebound aged over the long term. Twenty‐seven years later, we have made 42,866 home visits to 2264 persons in lower Manhattan, an area of New York City housing a high concentration of older people. Our purpose is to help our patients remain in their own homes and community at the maximum possible level of personal control and to maintain the best attainable health. Additionally, the program is a valuable component of the Hospital's Primary Care Adult Medicine residency program. It also serves as a laboratory for the study of health problems faced by the homebound aged and the solutions to these problems. The program, a medical‐social model, has required modest philanthropic investments, dedicated service by physicians, nurses, and social workers, and the support of a hospital with a strong charitable mission.
The CVP experience has encouraged the creation of other long‐term home healthcare programs across the country, including the Medicaid‐supported Nursing Home Without Walls program that spans New York State. Thus, the CVP can be viewed as a model rather than an idiosyncratic non‐replicable phenomenon. As such, the program has established that multidisciplinary healthcare teams, in collaboration with a teaching hospital, can provide long‐term home health care to homebound older people in the local community. Moreover such a practice is mutually beneficial. J Am Geriatr Soc 48:1002–1011, 2000.
Prehospital code status decisions can be made effectively within the NH setting. Outside of medical intensive care, DNR orders have no impact on NH and hospital care intensity in the short term. In the final 6 months of life, however, hospital use is less for the DNR subgroup.
A large proportion of hospital stays stem from rapid readmission of elderly patients. These patients represent high cost users of inpatient care. Intervention in the hospital admission-readmission cycle may serve the interests of patients and payors alike. Data collected through comprehensive geriatric assessment can be useful in identifying those patients at high risk of readmission and who might benefit from more intensive in-hospital or post hospital attention. However, risk factors for readmission are largely unknown. We conducted a prospective study of elderly patients admitted to a metropolitan teaching hospital medical service and assessed by a geriatric team, to increase our knowledge of the factors associated with hospital readmissions. The most powerful predictor of hospital readmission within 6 months proved to be prior hospitalization. Attempts to reduce rehospitalizations in elderly patients must focus on those with prior recent hospitalizations.
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