Healthcare (Feb 2023)

Time-to-Event Analysis of Factors Influencing Delay in Discharge from a Subacute Complex Discharge Unit during the First Year of the Pandemic (2020) in an Irish Tertiary Centre Hospital

  • Nithya Rajendran,
  • Puteri Maisarah Rameli,
  • Keneilwe Malomo,
  • Declan Byrne,
  • Joseph Browne,
  • Ontefetse Ntlholang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11040627
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 4
p. 627

Abstract

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Our study aimed to analyse delaying factors amongst patients with a length of stay (LOS) > 15 days during the COVID-19 pandemic using time-to-event analysis. A total of 390 patients were admitted between March 2020–February 2021 to the subacute complex discharge unit in St James’s Hospital: 326 (83.6%) were >65 years of age and 233 (59.7%) were female. The median (IQR) age was 79 (70–86) years with a median (IQR) of 19.4 (10–41) days. A total of 237 (60.7%) events were uncensored, with LOS > 15 days, of which 138 (58.2%) were female and 124 (52.32%) had >4 comorbidities; 153 (39.2%) were censored into LOS ≤ 15 days, and death occurred in 19 (4.8%). Kaplan–Meier’s plot compared factors causing a delay in discharge to the single factors: age, gender, and multimorbidity. A multivariate Cox regression analysis adjusted to age, gender, and multimorbidity predicted factors affecting LOS. Further research is required to explore multimorbidity as a risk factor for mortality in patients with prolonged LOS within a complex discharge unit and target gender-specific frailty measures to achieve high-quality patient management.

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