Lorenzo Palleschi, Walter de Alfieri, Bernardo Salani, Filippo Luca Fimognari, Alberto Marsilii, Andrea Pierantozzi, Luigi di Cioccio, Stefano Maria Zuccaro
OBJECTIVES: To investigate the characteristics of patients who regain function during hospitalization and the differences in terms of functional outcomes between patients admitted to geriatric and general medicine units.
DESIGN: Multicenter, prospective cohort study.
SETTING: Acute care geriatric and medical wards of five Italian hospitals.
PARTICIPANTS: One thousand forty-eight elderly patients hospitalized for acute medical diseases.
MEASUREMENTS: Functional status 2 weeks before hospital admission (baseline), at admission, and at discharge, as measured using the Barthel Index (BI).
RESULTS: Geriatric patients were older (P<.001) and had lower preadmission functional levels (P<.001) than medical patients. Between baseline and discharge, 43.2% of geriatric and 18.9% of medical patients declined in physical function. In the subpopulation of 464 patients who had declined before hospitalization (between baseline and admission), 59% improved during hospitalization (45% of geriatric and 75% of medical patients), whereas only approximately 1% declined further. High baseline function (odds ratio (OR)=1.03, 95% confidence interval (CI)=1.02\u20131.04, per point of BI) and greater functional decline before hospitalization (OR 0.95, 95% CI 0.94\u20130.97, per % point of BI decline) were significant predictors of in-hospital functional improvement; type of hospital ward and age were not.
CONCLUSION: Although geriatric patients have overall worse functional outcomes, in-hospital functional recovery may be frequent even in geriatric units, particularly in patients with greater preadmission functional loss and high baseline level of function.
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