Hospital At Home self-referral pathway: admission avoidance for older adults

Abstract ID
4459
Authors' names
Catrin Kunemund-Hughes1, Melissa Watters2, Rebekah Schiff3
Author's provenances
Guys and St. Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust
Abstract category
Abstract sub-category
Conditions

Abstract

Introduction

Hospital At Home (HaH) provides hospital-level care for acute medical issues that would traditionally require admission to an acute hospital bed. HaH with Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment has shown similar outcomes for older people living at home compared to those admitted to an acute hospital (Shepperd et al, 2021). Referral to an alternative from hospital can be slow and tortuous. To reduce this delay and chance of hospital admission, a pilot scheme of patient self-referral into HaH was launched in May 2024 and evaluated.

Method

Anonymised patient data was retrospectively collected from the electronic patient record software system for patients, EPIC, placed on the self-referral pathway between May 2024 and May 2025. Data on demographics, medical issues, clinical frailty score (CFS) and pathway utilisation was collected in the six months following enrolment onto the pathway. Patients in residential or nursing homes were excluded as referral is based on an alternative pathway.

Results

Fourteen patients aged 65 years or older (56%) enrolled on the pathway in the first 12 months. All patients had a CFS of 4 or above with the mode CFS 7 (range 4-8). The most common index medical condition for enrolment was frailty (28%) followed by heart failure (24%). 11 patients activated the pathway (79%). 5 patients activated the pathway themselves (45%) and 6 relatives or carers activated the pathway (55%). The mean length of stay for patients activating the pathway for a frailty index condition was 2 days (range 1-5, mode 1).

Conclusions

This pilot has demonstrated the utility of a self-referral pathway for older adults living with frailty. Further work is required to understand why so few patients in this group were offered the pathway, encourage greater use and evaluate further how the pathway is being utilised by patients and carers.

Comments

An excellent pilot with clear relevance to geriatric service development and admission avoidance. The results highlight the potential of self-referral pathways to empower patients and carers while supporting care closer to home.

Submitted by dr.estella_47659 on

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Interesting work 

What do you think the enablers are to encouraging patient self referral? 
I notice you excluded care home patients, what is the referral process for care home residents? 

Submitted by leeane.black@n… on

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Great initiative. The mean length of stay for frailty being only 2 days is impressive. Do you find that patients who self-refer are generally more engaged in their treatment than those referred by a doctor?

Submitted by ayahassadi1@gm… on

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This is fascinating thank you! Did you have to redirect any patients who self referred to other services? And if so, how was that recieved by the patient?

Submitted by catherine.grib… on

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Fantastic idea and pilot, very relevant given the shift in care towards the community. Poses a great opportunity to enable patients to access hospital at home services with fewer delays and possibly overall increase utilisation of the services. It would be very interesting to have some qualitative research on patient/care giver perspecitves on this and potential barriers 

Submitted by kepowell97_31417 on

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