Risk Profile for Preventable Hospitalizations in Older Adults: Challenges for the Interoperability of Health Networks

Muenzenmayer, MA; Méndez C.A.; Altamirano, AT; Espinosa, FV

Keywords: chile, health services accessibility, health services, primary health care

Abstract

Health research teams routinely face difficulties processing clinical data to determine risk profiles in susceptible populations. Aim: Generate a risk profile of avoidable hospitalizations in older adult patients using integrated healthcare networks of the Southern Metropolitan Health Service (SSMS) of the Metropolitan Region of Chile from 2019-2021. Methods: The present research has a retrospective longitudinal descriptive design of anonymized clinical database records from four Family Health Centers and a high-complexity South Metropolitan Health Service (SMHS) hospital. The information available in TRACKCARE and RAYEN records for 2019-2021 was cleaned and filtered, considering only the ICD-10 diagnoses of interest. Demographic and clinical data analysis was performed with descriptive and inferential statistics using GraphPad Prism v5.0. Results: 57.2% of older adults are women with an average age of 74.2 +/- 7.2 (P= 0.0352). There is a different distribution profile of the FONASA section between men and women (P= 0.0002) even when 74% of the total sample is affiliated with FONASA-B. 62.7% have a single ICD-10 diagnosis, the majority being high blood pressure and heart failure (I10-I11), reaching 34% of diagnoses. Conclusions: Despite the evident lack of interoperability between the available clinical registry bases, it was possible to identify a sociodemographic and clinical profile of people aged 65 years and more prone to avoidable hospitalizations. This is through a process of collection and cleansing from different sources of information available in the South Metropolitan Health Service and involved communities.

Más información

Título según WOS: Risk Profile for Preventable Hospitalizations in Older Adults: Challenges for the Interoperability of Health Networks
Volumen: 152
Número: 11
Fecha de publicación: 2024
Página de inicio: 1111
Página final: 1119
Idioma: Spanish
DOI:

10.4067/s0034-98872024001101111

Notas: ISI