SAGE Open (Mar 2019)

Study Protocol and Baseline Comparisons for a Pan-Canadian Initiative to Reduce Inappropriate Use of Antipsychotics in Long-Term Care Homes

  • John P. Hirdes,
  • Jennifer Major,
  • Selma Didic,
  • Christine Quinn,
  • Cynthia Sinclair,
  • Jennifer Bucek,
  • Stephen Samis,
  • Micaela Jantzi,
  • Jonathan Chen,
  • Nancy Curtin-Telegdi,
  • Kaye Phillips

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244019835942
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Antipsychotic use in the absence of symptoms or diagnoses related to psychosis is generally regarded as an inappropriate approach to care of older adults in nursing homes. The Canadian Foundation for Healthcare Improvement (CFHI) launched a pan-Canadian intervention study to reduce antipsychotic use in long-term care based on promising pilot study results from the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority (WRHA). Data from the Continuing Care Report System (CCRS) managed by the Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI) were used to compare the characteristics of residents in intervention homes with control homes not in the study. The sample was comprised of 5,434 residents in 49 intervention homes compared with 123,781 residents in 1,193 control homes. Resident-level comparisons included demographic, diagnostic, and clinical indicators. Facility-level comparisons included nine risk-adjusted quality indicators. The main differences of note were in geographic representation (Ontario homes were underrepresented), access to rehabilitation, and discharge patterns (both of which were related to Ontario practice patterns). There were few substantial differences in quality indicator performance between homes by study participation prior to the onset of the intervention. The study protocol used in this pan-Canadian intervention was based on a successful, small-scale pilot undertaken in one province. Sites that participated in the intervention did not differ in substantively meaningful ways from control homes. Therefore, subsequent study findings after the intervention are unlikely to be attributable to differences between homes that existed prior to the study onset.