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Caring for nursing home residents with COVID-19: a “hospital-at-nursing home” intermediate care intervention

Enrico Benvenuti, Giulia Rivasi, Matteo Bulgaresi, Riccardo Barucci, Chiara Lorini, Daniela Balzi, Antonio Faraone, Giacomo Fortini, Gabriele Vaccaro, Ilaria Del Lungo, Salvatore Gangemi, Sante Giardini, Cecilia Piga, Eleonora Barghini, Serena Boni, Giulia Bulli, Paolo Carrai, Andrea Crociani, Aldo Lo Forte, Letizia Martella, Simone Pupo, Irene Marozzi, Giulia Bandini, Primo Buscemi, Claudia Cosma, Lorenzo Stacchini, Lorenzo Baggiani, Andrea Ungar, Enrico Mossello, Guglielmo Bonaccorsi, Giancarlo Landini

2021Aging Clinical and Experimental Research21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Nursing home (NH) residents have been dramatically affected by COVID-19, with extremely high rates of hospitalization and mortality. AIMS: To describe the features and impact of an assistance model involving an intermediate care mobile medical specialist team (GIROT, Gruppo Intervento Rapido Ospedale Territorio) aimed at delivering "hospital-at-nursing home" care to NH residents with COVID-19 in Florence, Italy. METHODS: The GIROT activity was set-up during the first wave of the pandemic (W1, March-April 2020) and became a structured healthcare model during the second (W2, October 2020-January 2021). The activity involved (1) infection transmission control among NHs residents and staff, (2) comprehensive geriatric assessment including prognostication and geriatric syndromes management, (3) on-site diagnostic assessment and protocol-based treatment of COVID-19, (4) supply of nursing personnel to understaffed NHs. To estimate the impact of the GIROT intervention, we reported hospitalization and infection lethality rates recorded in SARS-CoV-2-positive NH residents during W1 and W2. RESULTS: The GIROT activity involved 21 NHs (1159 residents) and 43 NHs (2448 residents) during W1 and W2, respectively. The percentage of infected residents was higher in W2 than in W1 (64.5% vs. 38.8%), while both hospitalization and lethality rates significantly decreased in W2 compared to W1 (10.1% vs 58.2% and 23.4% vs 31.1%, respectively). DISCUSSION: Potentiating on-site care in the NHs paralleled a decrease of hospital admissions with no increase of lethality. CONCLUSIONS: An innovative "hospital-at-nursing home" patient-centred care model based on comprehensive geriatric assessment may provide a valuable contribution in fighting COVID-19 in NH residents.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePandemicCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Intervention (counseling)Geriatric careNursingEmergency medicineFamily medicineInternal medicineDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)Geriatric Care and Nursing HomesFrailty in Older AdultsIntensive Care Unit Cognitive Disorders