Redesigning Care of Hospitalized Young Adults With Chronic Childhood-Onset Disease.
Abstract
Background Young adults with chronic childhood-onset disease (CCOD) are routinely
admitted to internal medicine hospitalist services, yet most lack transition preparation
to adult care. Providers and patients feel the strain of admissions to adult services
in part due to their medical and social complexity. Methods We performed a descriptive
study of a care redesign project for young adults with CCOD hospitalized at a large,
tertiary care academic hospital. We describe the process of implementation of the
Med-Peds (MP) service line and characterize patients cared for by the service. We
measured and analyzed patient demographics, process implementation, healthcare screening,
and healthcare utilization data. Results During the 16 months of the study period,
254 patients were cared for by the MP service line, accounting for 385 hospitalizations.
The most common CCODs were sickle cell disease (22.4%) and type 1 diabetes (14.6%).
The majority (76%) of patients completed transition readiness assessment, and 38.6%
completed social determinant of health (SDH) screening during their admission. Patients
had high prevalence of SDH with 66.7% having an unmet social need. The average length
of stay was 6.6 days and the average 30-day readmission rate was 20.0%. Conclusions
There is opportunity to redesign the inpatient care of young adult patients with CCOD.
The MP service line is a care model that can be integrated into existing hospital
medicine teams with MP physicians. Hospitals should consider redesigning care for
young adults with CCOD to meet the transitional and social needs unique to this patient
population.
Type
Journal articleSubject
adolescentcare redesign
chronic disease
hospital medicine
inpatient medicine
med-peds
transition
young adult
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26058Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.7759/cureus.27898Publication Info
Feeney, Colby D; Platt, Alyssa; Rhodes, Jesse; Marcantonio, Yasmin; Patel-Nguyen,
Sonya; White, Tyler; ... Ming, David Y (2022). Redesigning Care of Hospitalized Young Adults With Chronic Childhood-Onset Disease.
Cureus, 14(8). pp. e27898. 10.7759/cureus.27898. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26058.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Colby Danielle Feeney
Assistant Professor of Medicine
David Yung Ming
Associate Professor of Pediatrics
I am a med-peds hospitalist and researcher with interests in improving systems of
care of patients with complex health needs. My research focus areas include implementation
science, population health sciences, community-engaged research, and digital health.
My vision is to design, implement, evaluate, and scale programs and interventions
that will simplify the delivery of complex care. By doing so, we can equitably improve
the health outcomes that matter most to children and adults with compl
Sonya Patel-Nguyen
Assistant Professor of Medicine
Alyssa Platt
Biostatistician III
Education: Masters Degree, Applied Economics. Duke University. 2007Bachelors Degree,
Economics and Mathematics. University of North Carolina at GreensboroOverview: Alyssa
has ongoing collaborations with faculty from Duke Global Health Institute, Hospital
Medicine, and Center for Aging. She has experience spanning the entire research cycle
from grant development and research design, to primary data (or secondary data analysis),
and publication of research f
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