The Geriatrics Unit in University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH) in Nigeria was established in an effort to provide quality healthcare to older persons with co-morbidities, using the Acute Care for Elders (ACE) model[5]. The service review reported in this paper is formative and was designed to assess the extent to which the initiative of setting up the unit had achieved the purpose; to disseminate lessons learned and make adjustments to the structures and processes, with a few to improving clinical outcomes[7] .
Quality healthcare requires that skilled professionals are retained, the best possible clinical outcomes are ensured, and clients are satisfied. It also includes prioritizing a clean, quiet, comfortable and pleasant environment for providing and receiving care, and commitment to improvement [8]. These have been the key ethos in the running of the multidisciplinary geriatrics unit in UBTH from its inception.
Donabedian's model describes structures, processes and outcomes as essential measures in healthcare [8, 9]. Staffing, buildings and beds are examples of structures; documentation of patient records, bed occupancy and referral patterns are examples of processes; discharges and deaths are examples of outcomes. According to Donabedian's model, outcomes are the gold standard for measuring impacts of healthcare interventions. However, all three measures are inter-related [9]. For example, structures impact on processes, and either or both of these impact on outcome[8]. Without process or structure measures, outcome measures do not give a full picture about the quality of healthcare provided [8].
"Balancing measures" in Donabedian's model describe broader consequences of healthcare interventions which may be positive or negative [10]. Examples are monitoring number of falls after interventions to reduce falls, and monitoring length of stay after interventions to ensure early discharge planning. Some aspects of the structures, processes, outputs/balancing measures and clinical outcomes in the geriatrics unit of UBTH have been highlighted in this report.
Bed occupancy rates describe utilized beds as a percent of available beds for the year [11]. Year-to-year comparisons in bed occupancy rates showed remarkable increases between 2014 and 2017: occupancy rates almost tripled between 2014 and 2016 (from 20.1–56.4%), There were 3 other adult medical wards in the hospital at the time the geriatrics unit was created, explaining the initially low bed occupancy rate in 2014. Demand for beds in 2016 could be described as moderate, (occupancy rate of 56.4%)[12], but by 2017, we exceeded 100% bed occupancy, and there was pressure to open the five closed beds. Sometimes it was impossible not to yield to such pressure, and on some occasions, beds were temporarily opened to admit additional patients. This explains a bed occupancy rate that exceeded 100% in 2017.
The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) states that hospital-wide bed occupancy rates in excess of 86% portend potential bed crises, with increased likelihood of healthcare acquired infections[13] Ward bed occupancy rates of up to 70% are desirable, but occupancy rates less than 60% is recommended[14]. Increasing utilization of the geriatrics ward beds put pressure on the workforce. The impact of this pressure on staff satisfaction and overall quality of life will be reported differently.
Average length of stay (ALOS) - reported in days - is the total number of in-patient days of care divided by total discharges, where total in-patient days of care is the summation of the number of days that patients stayed in the hospital for the period in focus[15]. Median ALOS was 13.9 days.
Inferences about ALOS in hospitals should be balanced against the multiple factors that determine length of stay. For example, patients who are more ill and who develop complications are likely to spend longer times in hospital than those who are less ill and who do not develop complications. In parts of the world where reduced length of stay is used to assess efficiency of healthcare and utilization of healthcare resources, ensuring shorter hospital stays may be influenced by financial incentives[16]. Average length of stay in countries within the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) in 2015 was eight days[17].
It is noteworthy that the highest lengths of hospital stays are reported in older persons[18]. A prospective study of elderly patients who died between 2005 and 2007 at University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital, Nigeria, showed an average length of stay of 6.8 ± 8.6 days[19]. ALOS of 15.6 ± 13.8 days was reported from a retrospective study of elderly patients admitted into the same hospital between 2001 and 2004.
We reported gross death rates between 23% and 31.8% in the four years (2014–2018) of this evaluation. Sanya et al. reported a death rate of 31.7% in elderly patients admitted into University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital, noting that a large proportion of deaths occurred within a few days of admission[19]. Onwuchekwa and Asekomeh reported a gross death rate of 26.7% in older persons admitted into medical wards in University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital between 2002 and 2006[20], whereas Adebusoye and Kalula however reported lower death rates (15%) in elderly patients admitted in a hospital in South Africa[21]. A much lower death rate of 4.6% was reported by Goh et. al from an acute geriatric ward in Singapore[22]. Our future evaluations will focus on comparative analyses of deaths in older persons between the geriatrics unit and other medical wards in UBTH. Data will also be disaggregated by gender and other socio-demographic characteristics to enable broader inferences.
It is estimated that 1% and 2% of all medical admissions result in a Discharge Against Medical Advice (DAMA)[23]. DAMA rates in the geriatrics unit in UBTH were between 0.8 and 6.1%. Lelieveld et al. reported DAMA rates of 0.4% in older persons in the United States, noting lower rates in older compared to younger patients, and that being Black or Hispanic, as well as being poor, are risk factors for DAMA in older persons[24]. We hope to analyze trends in DAMA and characterize patterns in order to better understand risk factors, and proffer mitigating recommendations, in future evaluations.
Retention of competent, motivated staff is the key to maintaining quality healthcare. The inter-disciplinary workforce was mostly comprised of healthcare professionals who had had prior team training in geriatrics[5]. Apart from this cohesive team, patients in the ward also received care from several consultants from several other disciplines in the hospital. These additional numbers were not captured in this evaluation.
Falls are one of the major challenges of older persons and geriatric centres[25]. The risk of falls increases during hospitalization due to the unfamiliar environment, illnesses, and treatments[26]. In the four years evaluated in this report, the maximum fall rate per 1,000 in-patient days was 3.0 with the minimum being 0.4. We are not aware of any reports of fall rates in hospitalized older persons in Nigeria. A rate of 3 to 5 falls per 1,000 bed stays was reported in retrospective study in United Kingdom[27]. Rubenstein, Josephson and Robbins reported a rate of 1.5 falls per bed per year in institutional settings[28]. In Nigeria, Bekibele and Gureje reported a falls prevalence of 23% in community-dwelling older persons[29]. The findings from our evaluation have provided baseline data regarding fall rates in hospitalized older persons, which could be used as a benchmark in future quality improvement interventions.
This review would have been undertaken and concluded more efficiently if electronic patient records had been available - a gap that will be addressed in our future quality improvement efforts.