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Explore the success of Transitional Case Management in reducing rehospitalizations & improving care continuity for addiction patients in Geneva. Discover the impact of this intervention on patient satisfaction and long-term outcomes.
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Building Bridges between inpatient and outpatient treatment settings (Transitional Case Management in addiction medicine) Louise Penzenstadler, Ariella Machado, Carina Soares, Yasser Khazaal
PLAN • Context in Geneva (Switzerland) • Problem • Transitional Case Management (TCM) • Results
CONTEXT IN GENEVA • Canton of Geneva: population 466,158 (198,979) • Psychiatrichospital 266 beds (8 beds in outpatient setting) • Addiction hospital unit 20 beds • 2 outpatient centres 918 patients • 3 transition case managers SwissFederalStatistical Office-STAT-TAB, 2017
Problem Raven et al. 2010, Pringle et al. 2006
Problem In 2014: 306 patients hospitalized (524 hospitalstays/hospitalizations) 17.3% (53 patients) hospitalized≥ 3x/year Furtherdetails: 3 hospitalizations: 28 patients (9.2%) 4 hospitalizations: 9 patients (2.9%) 5 hospitalizations: 9 patients (2.9%) 6 hospitalizations: 3 patients (1.0%) 7 hospitalizations: 2 patients (0.7%) 8 hospitalizations: 2 patients (0.7%)
Transitional Case Management TEAM (TCM) Indications • Patients at high risk for rehospitalization: • High service use • No outpatient care or chaotic use of outpatient care • Prevention Mas-Expósito et al. 2013, Vanderplasschen et al. 2004
Transitional Case Management (TCM) 30 daysafterhospitaldischarge TCM Intervention
Transitional Case Management team (tcM) • Standardizedtoolsused for: • Evaluation of problems and definition of specificneeds • Network plan • Advanced directives (Crisis management) • Co-construction of care plan for the patient’slaterdischarge Aims: • Improve transition to outpatient care and continuity of care • Reducerehospitalizations and emergency department use/visits Bonsack et al. 2009, Pomini et al. 2008
3 or more hospitalizations per year 230 patients with TCM (313 episodes of TCM) Before TCM TCM
Conclusion • Useful intervention for improvingcontinuity of care • Helpsreducerehospitalisation (phenomenon of revolving doors) in addiction treatment • High patient satisfaction as seen by treatmentadherence Furtherevaluation and long termfollow-up in progress
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