PLoS ONE (Jan 2024)

Tele-medicine controlled hospital at home is associated with better outcomes than hospital stay.

  • Noa Zychlinski,
  • Ronen Fluss,
  • Yair Goldberg,
  • Daniel Zubli,
  • Galia Barkai,
  • Eyal Zimlichman,
  • Gad Segal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0309077
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 8
p. e0309077

Abstract

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BackgroundHospital-at-home (HAH) is increasingly becoming an alternative for in-hospital stay in selected clinical scenarios. Nevertheless, there is still a question whether HAH could be a viable option for acutely ill patients, otherwise hospitalized in departments of general-internal medicine.MethodsThis was a retrospective matched study, conducted at a telemedicine controlled HAH department, being part of a tertiary medical center. The objective was to compare clinical outcomes of acutely ill patients (both COVID-19 and non-COVID) admitted to either in-hospital or HAH. Non-COVID patients had one of three acute infectious diseases: urinary tract infections (UTI, either lower or upper), pneumonia, or cellulitis.ResultsThe analysis involved 159 HAH patients (64 COVID-19 and 95 non-COVID) who were compared to a matched sample of in-hospital patients (192 COVID-19 and 285 non-COVID). The median length-of-hospital stay (LOS) was 2 days shorter in the HAH for both COVID-19 patients (95% CI: 1-3; p = 0.008) and non-COVID patients (95% CI; 1-3; p ConclusionsCare for acutely ill patients in the setting of telemedicine-based hospital at home has the potential to reduce hospitalization length without increasing readmission risk and to reduce both 30 days and one-year mortality rates.