AI Article Synopsis

  • Geriatric patients with musculoskeletal issues traditionally received orthopedic care, but often needed additional geriatric management due to comorbidities.
  • A pilot study compared the outcomes of the orthogeriatric co-management (OG-CM) model with conventional orthopedic care, finding that OG-CM led to an increased number of diagnoses and significantly reduced readmissions, without impacting mortality rates.
  • Although costs rose after implementing OG-CM, the overall quality of care improved, highlighting the need for further research to establish causal relationships.

Article Abstract

Traditionally, geriatric patients with musculoskeletal or osteoarticular problems will be admitted to an orthopedic ward and will be treated by sur- geons. However, these patients often suffer from comorbidities requiring geriatric management. In this study, the orthogeriatric co-management (OG- CM) model is compared to traditional orthopedic care model in a retrospective pilot study. In this study, two patients groups were compared during two similar time periods : (1) Group 1 consisted of 119 geriatric patients admitted to an orthopedic (trauma) ward who were treated, with conventional geriatric care on demand (before OG- CM ; October 1-December 31, 2013) and (2) Group 2 consisted of 132 geriatric patients who were admitted after the implementation of the OG-CM model (after OG-CM ; October 1-December 31, 2014). Outcomes measured were : quality of care outcome, mortality and costs. After the introduction of OG-CM, the number of diagnoses increased (P = 0.011) adjusting for sex, age, length of stay (LOS), urgency and getting surgery (yes/ no). However, this did not lead to a significant higher severity of illness (SOI). The number of readmissions within a year were significantly lower after OG-CM (0.31 per patient) compared to before OG-CM (0.89 per patient) (P < 0.001). No significant difference in in-house and reported mortality after 3 months was observed. Costs increased, but no significant differences were found. The OG-CM model demonstrated an increase in quality of care. This was indicated by an increased number of medical diagnoses resulting in having less readmissions, without affecting the mortality rates and the LOS. Future randomized multi-centered studies are required to enable causal relationships.

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