AI Article Synopsis

  • Clinical guidelines often divide care for older adults, but the ICHOM has created a standardized tool to assess their health comprehensively, focusing on value-based health metrics in Taiwan.
  • This study analyzed data from seniors aged 65 and over with multiple chronic conditions, examining factors like physical performance and cognitive assessment, and applied the ICHOM tool, categorizing healthcare status on a 0-10 scale.
  • Findings revealed that older adults with high disease burden or cognitive impairment were less likely to achieve a high value-based healthcare score, highlighting the need for a shift from merely treating diseases to addressing overall well-being and personal health goals.

Article Abstract

Background: Clinical guidelines for specific conditions fragment care provision for elders. The International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement (ICHOM) has developed a global standard set of outcome measures for comprehensive assessment of older persons. The goal of this study was to report value-based health metrics in Taiwan using this ICHOM toolset.

Methods: The cross-sectional study of baseline data excerpted from a prospective longitudinal cohort, which recruited people ≥65 years old with ≥3 chronic medical conditions between July and December 2018. All participants received measurements of physical performance, anthropometric characteristics, health-related behaviors, Charlson Comorbidity Index, and Montreal Cognitive Assessment. The ICHOM toolset comprises three tiers: 1 includes frailty and having chosen a preferred place of death; 2 includes polypharmacy, falls, and participation in decision-making; and 3 includes loneliness, activities of daily living, pain, depression, and walking speed. These items were converted into a 0-10 point value-based healthcare score, with high value-based health status defined as ≥8/10 points.

Results: Frequencies of individual ICHOM indicators were: frail 11.7%, chose preferred place of death 14.4%, polypharmacy 31.5%, fell 17.1%, participated in decision-making 81.6%, loneliness 26.8%, limited activities of daily living 22.4%, pain 10.4%, depressed mood 13.0%, and slowness 38.5%. People with high disease burden (OR 0.40, 95% CI 0.21-0.76, p = 0.005) or cognitive impairment (OR 0.49, 95%CI 0.27-0.87, p = 0.014) were less likely to have high value-based healthcare status.

Conclusions: The ICHOM Standard Set Older Person health outcome measures provide an opportunity to shift from a disease-centric medical paradigm to whole person-focused goals. This study identified advanced age, chronic disease burden and cognitive impairment as important barriers to achieving high value-based healthcare status.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7487791PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12877-020-01734-1DOI Listing

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