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Centre for Policy on Ageing | |
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Mortality in older care home residents in England and Wales | Author(s) | Sunil M Shah, Iain M Carey, Tess Harris |
Journal title | Age and Ageing, vol 42, no 2, March 2013 |
Publisher | Oxford University Press, March 2013 |
Pages | pp 209-215 |
Source | www.ageing.oxfordjournals.org |
Keywords | Care homes ; Nursing homes ; Residents [care homes] ; Death rate [statistics] ; England ; Wales. |
Annotation | Mortality in UK care homes is not well described. The present study aimed to describe one-year mortality and predictors in older care home residents compared with community residents. The method used was a cohort study using the THIN primary care database with 9,772 care home and 354,306 community residents aged 65-104 years in 293 English and Welsh general practices in 2009. In all 2,558 (26.2%) care home and 11,602 (3.3%) community residents died within one year. The age and sex standardised mortality ratio for nursing homes was 419 (95% CI: 396_442) and for residential homes was 284 (266_302). Age-related increases in mortality were less marked in care homes than community. Comorbidities and identification as inappropriate for chronic disease management targets predicted mortality in both settings, but associations were weaker in care homes. The number of drug classes prescribed and primary care contact were the strongest clinical predictors of mortality in care homes. Overall the authors conclude that older care home residents experience high mortality. Age and diagnostic characteristics are weaker predictors of risk of death within care homes than the community. Measures of primary care utilisation may be useful proxies for frailty and improve difficult end of life care decisions in care homes. (JL). |
Accession Number | CPA-130308226 A |
Classmark | KW: LHB: KX: S5: 82: 9 |
Data © Centre for Policy on Ageing |
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...from the Ageinfo database published by Centre for Policy on Ageing. |
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