Abstract
Home-based primary care (HBPC) refers to the type of home care services which provide interdisciplinary primary care services with a comprehensive and continuous manner. Currently, it is getting much attention due to possess potential of converting primary care services from outpatient clinic to home, especially for those who are medically isolated including homebound older adults. This study examined a number of HBPCs introduced in the literature since 1990s, and summarizes the key factors with the analytic framework of 5Ps: purpose, patients, people, process, patterns. The results of this study emphasize that contents of primary care for older population should be different from those of the general population. This paper may be interpreted as the practice guideline of the following policy questions: “How can we design the HBPC if it is introduced in the nearest future?” In the future, it is necessary to have a heated debate concerning what is the most desirable primary care system for older adults.
Keywords: Home care, Homebound older adults, Primary care system, Frailty, Interdisciplinary team
INTRODUCTION
Primary care refers to healthcare service which is provided by a physician of the first or the most frequently contact.1,2) The term primary care was first used in the Dawson Report in 1920 in the United Kingdom.3) In 1978, the Alma-Ata Declaration of the World Health Organization suggested the desirable components of primary health care.4) A physician should provide first-contact healthcare services with a patient-centered perspective as well as comprehensive and collaborative cares to deal with various medical problems and patient needs. Also, this kind of care must be continued from the ‘cradle to the grave.’ In other words, the concept of ‘family doctor’ or ‘regular doctor’ has been evolved with the development of the term of primary care. However, in countries where the most medical services are offered by private sector with competitive manner, the realistic meaning of primary care might be rather different. For example, in South Korea, it is widely accepted that primary care is the almost same terminology of local private local private clinics, because the proportion of the proportion of the private sector to total number of healthcare institutions which provide medical services is 94.4%.5)
However, when we narrow our focus to the target population as older adults, we may doubt whether the current local clinics in Korea are appropriate for central roles of primary care. In particular, once we take into account the steep rise in the number of homebound older adults who are virtually isolated and enable to mobilize, shouldn’t we pursuit more active strategies of primary care? In fact, the United States and some other countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries are moving to reform the primary healthcare system based on this recognition.6–8) Home-based primary care (HBPC) is emerging model of care as one of the alternatives to move patient-centered primary care from local outpatient clinics to the home. This study emphasizes that the primary care for older adults should be different from that of the general population. The most advanced medical care needed in 21st century is not in the highly technological services, paradoxically, but in the most analogue services of home care.9,10) Therefore, in this study, we aim to provide a review of the literature on various home care services in OECD countries and to suggest which factors should be importantly considered if HBPC is newly introduced in South Korea. Specifically, 2 questions are focused: (1) What is the core contents of HBPC which are commonly described in literatures? (2) How can we design the HBPC if it is introduced in the nearest future in South Korea (or other countries with less matured primary care system)?
MATERIALS AND METHODS
1. Definition of Terms
Home care refers to healthcare activities performed by a physician or healthcare provider by visiting a patient’s home. In previous research, it is also called “home visit,” “house call,” “outdoor practice,” or “home-based medicine.” In Western history of medicine, home care was quite prevalent until the 20th century’s begin.11) Until the 1930s, in the United States, 40% of entire medical practice were reported to have been performed at home.12) This is because the hospital in the modern sense was established only in the early 20th century. Since then, with the development of hospitals, the number of home visits has declined sharply, and a hospital-centered medical system has been formed in most countries after the mid-20th century. However, in recent 30 years, the importance of home care has been emphasized again.13,14) Due to the change of people’s thought and desire on medical care, demands for home care services has increased significantly.
HBPC refers to the type of home care services which provide interdisciplinary primary care services with a comprehensive and continuous manner.15) It is known that the first HBPC model was developed in the Mount Sinai Visiting Doctor program in New York, USA, and it is known to be one of the most successful home care program applied in the US Department of Veterans Affairs in 1985.16) Recently, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), an evidence-based medical technology assessment agency, presented a more rigorous definition of HBPC (Table 1). According to the definition, HBPC has distinguished characteristics from other general home care services. To be called as HBPC, physicians should make his/her own visit to patient’s home, not temporarily, and provide comprehensive healthcare or social services through interdisciplinary teams. In the present study, we will use the term HBPC according to the definition of AHRQ, which contains desirable natures of primary care as suggested in Table 1 during the process of home visiting.
Table 1.
Require for this review | Optional | Excluded |
---|---|---|
1. Visits by a primary care provider Visits by a physician, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant | Additional visits Nurses, physical therapists, social worker, counselors, etc. |
Other models that do not include primary care home visits. Telephone call care only or nurse (or other provider) care only. |
2. Visits to a patient’s home Home is defined as any noninstitutional setting where patient resides. It can include private houses or apartments, adult homes, senior housing or assisted living. |
Following patient across care setting In hospital management and short-term postacute rehabilitation |
Patients in institutions Patients who live in nursing homes, prisons, or long-term care hospitals |
3. Longitudinal management The intention is to provide care for an indefinite period until admission to an institution, change in status, or death. |
Not applicable | Short term One-time home visits or assessments, hospital at home models in which care is provided for an acute need and the patient returns to previous primary care, or transitional care, for a short defined period (e.g., 30 to 90 days posthospitalization, or 14 days after surgery). |
4. Comprehensive primary care Includes medical care for, and the management of, chronic conditions and disabilities, preventive care, providing or arranging needed acute care and environmental assessments. |
Inclusion of additional services such as mental health services, palliative care, long term services and supports or social services Assessment and management of serious mental illness including depression. Integration of palliative care or hospice with home-based primary care. |
Single condition care or single topic risk assessment Fall risk assessments, programs that target a single condition such as congestive heart failure. |
Adapted from Totten et al. AHRQ Publication No. 15(16)-EHC036-EF. Rockville (MD): Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (US); 2016.16)
2. Sources of Information
PubMed, MEDLINE and Cochrane Database were searched for articles published between January 1, 1990, and September 30, 2017 using the key phrases (“home-based primary care” or “home care” or “home visit” or “house call” or “outdoor practice” or “home-based medicine”) and (“ageing” or “aging” or “aged” or “older” or “elderly”). Review articles and original research that related to the home care of broad meaning were examined. Also, gray literatures were collected through manual search. HBPC is not a service or program targeted only for the elderly. However, in this study, we focused to the HBPC programs which were targeted for community-dwelling or homebound older adults aged 65 year-olds or over. This study did not provide a critical review of the literature but presents examples of models that have been evaluated.
3. Theoretical Framework
HBPC is being considered as one of the alternatives of the primary care in several countries in order to improve medical accessibility and reduce medical cost especially targeted on homebound older adults. Lately, a number of reports and articles have been published concerning comprehensive care models for older adults at national, municipal, and neighborhood levels.16–20) As a representative study, Boult et al.21) reported the 15 “successful” models of care for older adults based on 123 high-quality studies which published from 1987 to 2008. According to the report, all fifteen models showed the evidence of improvement at least one of the following outcomes: quality of care, quality of life, functional autonomy, mortality or health service utilization (Table 2). Among the models, HBPC could be classified as preventive home visit or interdisciplinary primary care or mixed one.
Table 2.
Model | Studies | Quality of care | Quality of life | Functional autonomy | Survival | Use/cost of health services |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. Interdisciplinary primary care | 1 Meta-analysis | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | U: ○ |
2 Reviews | C: ○ | |||||
9 RCTs | ||||||
3 QE studies | ||||||
1 XS time series | ||||||
| ||||||
2. Care and case management | 12 RCTs | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | U: ○ |
1 QE study | C: ○ | |||||
| ||||||
3. Disease management | 1 Review | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | U: ○ |
1 Meta-analysis | ||||||
2 RCTs | ||||||
| ||||||
4. Preventive home visit | 3 Meta-analysis | NA | NA | ○ | ○ | U: ○ |
| ||||||
5. CGA, GEM | 10 RCTs | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | U: ○ |
1 QE | ||||||
| ||||||
6. Pharmaceutical care | 6 RCTs | ○ | ○ | NA | ○ | U: ○ |
| ||||||
7. Chronic disease self-management | 1 Meta-analysis | NA | ○ | ○ | NA | U: ○ |
10 RCTs | C: ○ | |||||
| ||||||
8. Proactive rehabilitation | 4 RCTs | NA | ○ | ○ | ○ | U: ○ |
1 QE studies | ||||||
| ||||||
9. Caregiver education and support | 2 Meta-analysis | NA | ○ | ○ | ND | U: ○ |
3 RCTs | C: ○ | |||||
| ||||||
10. Transitional care | 1 Meta-analysis | NA | ○ | ND | ○ | U: ○ |
2 RCTs | C: ○ | |||||
| ||||||
11. Substitutive hospital-at-home | 5 RCTs | ND | ○ | ○ | ND | U: ○ |
1 QE study | C: ○ | |||||
| ||||||
12. Early-discharge hospital-at-home | 4 RCTs | NA | ○ | ○ | ND | U: ○ |
| ||||||
13. Care in nursing home | 5 QE studies | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | U: ○ |
1 RCT | C: ○ | |||||
| ||||||
14. Prevention and management of delirium | 4 RCTs | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | U: ○ |
2 QE studies | C: ○ | |||||
| ||||||
15. Comprehensive inpatient care | 2 Meta-analysis | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | U: ○ |
5 RCTs | ||||||
1 QE study |
CGA, comprehensive geriatric assessment; GEM, geriatric evaluation and management; ○, better outcomes; NA, not assessed; ND, no difference; RCT, randomized controlled trial; QE, quasi-experimental; XS, cross-sectional; U, use of health services; C, cost of health services. Adapted from Boult et al. J Am Geriatr Soc 2009;57:2328–37, with permission of Wiley.21)
In this study, we use a clinical microsystem model which proposed by Olsan et al.22) as the main analytic framework. This model was originally developed to answer the question, “How can we improve the quality of service in healthcare organizations?” According to this model, contents and quality of HBPC are determined through the interaction between the 5 components (5Ps): purpose, patients, people, process, patterns. First, the purpose of HBPC is related with the question, which concerns the value of home care: ‘Why do we have to visit to a patient’s home?’ Second, HBPC is specially targeted to the patients of homebound older adults. It includes the family (caregiver) of the patients who gives support at home. Third, HBPC service is provided by the people of interdisciplinary team which is often composed of physicians, nurses, physical therapists, social workers, dietitians, and other kinds of healthcare specialists. Fourth, the process of HBPC is organized by the various program components from enrollment to discharge, including interprofessional care meetings among the workforces as well as service programs. Fifth, the pattern of HBPC is about the performance how to measure the results of service provision. This study examined a number of HBPCs introduced in the literature since 2000s, and summarizes with the analytic framework of 5Ps.
RESULTS
1. What is the Purpose of HBPC? (Purpose)
The main objectives of the HBPC program, which is frequently mentioned in previous studies, are listed as follows.
(1) Promote medical accessibility for homebound older adults
(2) Provide integrated and continuous healthcare services
(3) Respect the value of patient’s self-selection during the treatment process
(4) Reduce medical cost of older adults (e.g., unnecessary hospitalization)
First, improving accessibility to medically unreached groups such as homebound older adults is the most basic purpose of HBPC. Second, providing high-quality primary care services through home visits is an explicit goal pursued by a lot of programs of HBPC. Third, HBPC promotes patient-doctor relationships and naturally assures self-selection of patient and family during the treatment process. In particular, in the United Kingdom (UK) and Europe, respecting the value of self-selection is one of the most important goals of HBPC. Fourth, from a policy standpoint, HBPC is being tested within the goal of reducing medical cost among older adults.
These objectives contain paramount importance because they warn against the major trends of bio-industrialized medicine, which are heavily reliant on digital technology. In other words, the essence of medical care is still in the trust of the patient-doctor relationship.23,24) It must be based on ‘touch’ rather than ‘tech.’9) Clinical significance of contact is well known through previous studies of HBPC. Stuck and his colleagues17) reported that there was a 33% reduction in nursing home admission, when the number of home visits was conducted as many as 9 or more times. This suggests that HBPC has profound effects over the simple medication therapy. HBPC may promote population health through empowerment and/or social capital pathways.25,26)
There are some controversial issues whether HBPC should include ‘respect for self-selection’ in its purpose.14,19) In fact, patient choice and participation must be respected as one of the most important values.25) However, if we are looking at the historical background, these values are closely related to the modernizing trends of social service initiated in UK in 1998. At that time, the prime minister, Tony Blair emphasized the personalization and privatization of state-centered public services within the political context of the ‘third way.’27) In HBPC, the emphasis of self-selection is mean to determine the type and contents of service by the patients.14) In this model, the patient could designate his or her family as a paid caregiver. There are 2 major criticisms of this consumer-directed care model. First, if the asymmetry of information and the monopoly structure of medical profession could not fundamentally be changed, self-selection in the medicine has no profound meaning beyond transferring all costs and responsibilities to the patient.28) Second, the clinical effects of consumer-directed HBPC in the UK, the Netherlands, Germany, and Austria were significantly lower than that of North America in where consumer-directed services were not much prevailed.14,19) In addition, emphasis on consumer choice has been reported to be ineffective in terms of reducing medical costs, as there exists evidence to increase service utilization.29) However, satisfaction rate with patients and caregivers was significantly high.14)
2. Who Are the Targets of HBPC? (Patients)
The major target of HBPC is older adults especially in the following conditions.
(1) Functionally impaired persons
(2) Frail or isolated older adults
(3) Dying patients
(4) Patient’s family and caregivers who provides supportive care
The patients most in needs of home care are those who have limited activities of daily living (ADL) in one or more domains, or who are largely dependent in instrumental ADL. According to Olsan et al.22), HBPC subjects have an average ADL limit of 3.86. These severely impaired persons are generally eligible for long-term care facilities, but often refuse to admit to the facility due to willing to maintain their independent living in their own homes. Another major type of home care recipient is frail older adults or socially isolated older adults who are characterized as temporary impairment of geriatric function. Frailty refers to high-risk older adults who seem healthy at first sight but, due to have phenotypical characteristics of weakness, shrinking, poor endurance, slowness, and low physical activity, are at high risk of developing disability within months or years.30) Isolated older adults refer to persons who are not actively participating in any kinds of social activities and, as a result, lacking supportive networks.31) According to the recommendation of Independent at Home of Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services in the United States, a person who has deficits in two or more ADL and has experience of hospitalization in the last year should be given priority to enroll in HBPC.16) The advantage of this approach is that these patients are also those likely to have high health costs, making it feasible that cost saving could be realized in a relative short period of time.
How many people of homebound older adults are living in South Korea? Homebound status is often investigated through a self-questionnaire which measures the number of going outdoors or difficulties in going outside during the last week or month.32–35) In recent study, Ornstein et al.36) attempt to recategorize homebound persons into 2 groups, those who never (complete homebound) or rarely (mostly homebound) left the home and who could only left their home with assistance (semihomebound). Table 3 summarizes the prevalence of homebound older adults which were reported in epidemiologic studies in several countries. Although it seems rather varied, the prevalence rate of homebound older adults reported as 5%–20% in several OECD countries.
Table 3.
Study | Country | Area | Subjects | Prevalence (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Umegaki et al.32) | Japan | Urban | 3,444 | 14.4 |
Negrón-Blanco et al.33) | Spain | Rural | 1,622 | 9.8 |
Cohen-Mansfield et al.34) | Israel | Nationwide | 1,609 | 17.7–19.5 |
Ganguli et al.35) | USA | Rural | 878 | 10.3 |
Ornstein et al.36) | USA | Nationwide (medicare) | 7,609 | 5.6 (complete, 1.1; mostly, 4.5; semi-, 15.0) |
There is no single survey that has been conducted to estimate prevalence of homebound older adults in South Korea. Thus, the prevalence must be estimated by using indirect method.37) The only exception is a survey of 3,024 female older adults who were registered in the Nurse-led Home-visiting Program in South Korea.38) In this study, the prevalence of homebound older adults under 75 years old and over 75 years old were 22.8% and 40.2%, respectively. According to this study, the prevalence of homebound older adults is estimated as 30.1%, when we simply apply the population weight calculated from 2016 Population and Housing Census (Table 4). This rate must be overestimated when we consider the issues of sample selection and measurement error.
Table 4.
Variable | Estimation | Prevalence (%) |
---|---|---|
Homebound older adults (low income) | 2,100,000 | 30.1%* |
Isolated older adults | 1,300,000† | 18.9 |
Frail older adults | 600,000‡ | 8.3 |
Functionally impaired older adults | 570,000§ | 8.1 |
Estimated prevalence rate according to the survey of female older adults who were registered in the Nurse-led Home-visiting Program in South Korea (applying population weight38)).
Estimated number of isolated older adults according to the nationwide survey in Korea (applying 18.9% [respondent rate who did not participate in any regular meeting during the last month] to older adults aged 65 and over40)).
Estimated number of frail older adults according to the nationwide survey in Korea (applying 8.3% [according to the Fried Criteria] to elderly population40)).
Number of survivors enrolled in Long-term Care Insurance in Korea (National Health Insurance Corporation39)).
The prevalence rate could be estimated with other results of nationally representative survey (Table 4). As of September 2017, the number of survivor who are enrolled in the Long-Term Care Insurance in South Korea is 570,000 (8.1% of total elderly population).39) Considering the existence of noncoverage rate, the actual prevalence of functionally impaired older adults might be higher. In Korea, the prevalence of frail and isolated older adults are estimated to be 600,000 (8.3% of total elderly population) and 1.3 million (18.9% of total elderly population) respectively.40) Thus, it is estimated that there are at least 600,000 or at most 2.1 million people who are both aged 65 or older and rarely left home. In other words, at least one-tenth of the older adults in South Korea is a medically isolated group, who could hardly meet a doctor other than a way of home visiting.
3. Who Are Working for HBPC? (People)
The main workforce of HBPC are described as follows. These people work full-time or part-time. But, they always work together as a team.
(1) Physician
(2) Nurse (nurse practitioner, physician assistance, clinical nurse specialist, etc.)
(3) Healthcare practitioner (physical therapist, occupational therapist, dietitian, etc.)
(4) Social worker
(5) Administrative assistant personnel (service coordinator, administrative manager, etc.)
(6) Volunteers
As a leader of the HBPC team, physicians are often geriatrics, family medicine, or internal medicine specialists. In the case of HBPC at university hospital settings, medical students or doctors in residency training program may participate in part-time visits. Nurses are core member of the HBPC. They are usually selected for an average ten years of clinical experience or for the certified as a geriatric nurse practitioner. In the United States, full-time case load for a nurse vary from 100 to 225 homebound older adults.22) Typically half a day is devoted to home visits, and the average time per visit range from 30 minutes to 1 hour (the first visit requires 1 to 2 hours). Other health-care provider can be configured differently depending on the primary purpose of HBPC. For example, in the House Calls for Seniors in Indianapolis, USA, social workers are working together with geriatricians and geriatric nurse practitioners as to build an interdisciplinary care team.41) They develop a comprehensive social needs plan through a weekly patient care meeting. In a typical team meeting, lasting 90 minutes, up to 30 patients can be discussed. The team meeting is considered critical to the coordination of care and success of the House Calls program. This kind of model of integrative care has been reported as clinically effective, especially for the low-income older population.42)
The job satisfaction of the HBPC workforce importantly depends on how well the program achieves its goals and values.22) For example, if successful outreach was made to meet a certain medically isolated person, or if a home care service can successfully prevent unnecessary hospitalization or nursing home admission, job satisfaction would be increased. A more important factor, however, is a close relationship with the patient (or family caregiver). This kind of compensation can only be gained through home visiting activities.43) In addition, it is also important to ensure that HBPC workforce could take pride in his/her work because they are contributing to health equity and social justice. In the United States and Canada, participating in HBPC are gradually becoming an important coursework for medical education and training.44,45)
4. What is the Program of HBPC? (Process)
The major program components which consists HBPC are listed as follows.
(1) Screening and enrollment
(2) Comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA)
(3) Interprofessional care meeting
(4) Establishing home visits
(5) 24-hour urgent telephone counseling
(6) Coordinating community services and resources
Referrals come from a variety of channels, including local private clinics, general hospitals (geriatric care unit), public healthcare center, home care center, hospice organizations, long-term care facilities, social welfare centers, churches, families, and individuals. Thereafter, screening process is performed by using the preset enrollment criteria. A care plan is developed based on the finding from the CGA which is often perform during the first visit by the geriatrician. The CGA is a multidimensional and interdisciplinary diagnostic process designed to determine an older person’s medical conditions, mental health, functional capacity and social circumstances.46) The purpose is to plan and carry out a holistic plan for treatment, rehabilitation, support and long-term follow-up. The CGA is core service of HBPC.
An interprofessional care meeting is another important component for operating successful HBPC.17,19,47) Following initial data gathering by the CGA, the team should meet to discuss the patient’s needs. Each meeting typically begins with short discipline-specific presentations followed by interactive discussion among professionals.46) Thereafter, administrative manager of HBPC sets up a home visit schedule, and various services would be coordinated according to the result of the meeting. In meta-analysis, a clinical examination as part of the initial multidimensional evaluation had a significant effect on reducing functional decline of older adults by 56% in home care settings.47) Also, according to the systematic review, 3 core components are reported to be important in the 6 HBPC program which demonstrated clinical effectiveness: interprofessional care teams, regular interprofessional care meetings (at least once a week), and after-hours support.19)
Periodic home visits according to the care plan could prevent emergency department visit, unnecessary hospitalization, and admission to long-term care facilities. Often, more than 9 visits (at least once a month) are required in most of the HBPC programs.16) If such visits are carried out by interdisciplinary teams, significantly effect of reducing functional decline and preventing nursing home admission could be observed.17) However, the actual number of visits vary according to the workforce and financial circumstances of HBPC. For example, the House Calls Program in South California, USA, reported that the number of doctors’ visits were high during the pilot phase, but gradually replaced with nurse practitioners’ visits to lower the program costs per patient.48) In another example, the House Calls for Seniors in Indianapolis, USA, reported that the number of home visits of social workers could be reduced by increasing the role of telephone counseling (e.g., 227 home visits and 3,048 phone calls per year for a single social worker).41)
Twenty-four-hour urgent telephone counseling is another essential service which may have been underreported but explicitly important to reduce emergency department visits and unnecessary hospitalization rates.19) To do this, duty system to cover the night and weekend time is needed to set up. A typical example is the House Calls program in South California, which operates a HealthCare Partner’s 24/7 Support Center, where triage nurses take the duty of emergency telephone counseling without cease.48) In case of urgent situation, consultation with the doctor on duty is carried out as to instruct patient and/or family how to cope with the events. In some cases, emergency home visit is performed by the HBPC physician.
In addition, HBPC team should build a community network from the various resources in the neighborhood to create a therapeutic environment for the patient. This includes public healthcare centers, mental health centers, dementia support centers, welfare centers, regional office of the municipal government, churches, nongovernmental organizations, food bank, citizen’s associations as well as HBPC’s service programs (e.g., preventive home visiting program, nutritional support program, prehabilitation program). Community network does not occur overnight. Substantial efforts, such as regular interagency meeting, must be prepared to build up trust and efficient communication. Table 5 lists the detailed program components needed to provide effective HBPC service.22)
Table 5.
Contents | Detailed program components |
---|---|
Healthcare services |
|
Community services |
|
Standard of care |
|
Communication |
|
Coordination and coverage |
|
Workforce management |
|
Equipment and supply |
|
Financial and legal support |
|
Technical support |
|
Sustainability |
|
Adapted from Olsan et al. J Am Med Dir Assoc 2009;10:304–13, with permission of Elsevier.22)
5. What is the Performance Indicators of HBPC? (Patterns)
The key performance indicators of HBPC are listed as follows.
(1) Patient satisfaction
(2) Clinical effectiveness
(3) Utilization of medical services
(4) Medical cost
First, the basic performance indicator of HBPC is patient satisfaction. There are abundant of evidences that HBPC increases satisfaction among patients and caregivers.14,16,49) It is often said that homebound older adults might be difficult to use the primary healthcare services if there were no HBPC program in their hometown.50) HBPC has also been known to be effective in reducing caregiver burden which occurs mostly during the process of unpaid care works by the family.51) Most of the citizens living in the region where the HBPC pilot project was initiated hope the program to be continued.50)
HBPC should promote patients’ health. In many studies, clinical effectiveness has been measured using the following outcome indicators: (1) mortality, (2) disability, (3) admission to long-term care facilities, (4) fall, (5) quality of life, and (6) caregiver burden. Other indicators such as depression, cognitive function, nutritional status, physical performance, and social support also can be measured. However, from a policy perspective, another important performance indicator is medical cost. Most of the studies, including systematic reviews and meta-analysis, measured performance of HBPC by using (1) emergency department visits, (2) unnecessary hospitalization, and (3) medical cost of older adults.
Can we tell how effective HBPC is for the homebound older adults? A number of systematic reviews and meta-analysis have been carried out and their main conclusions could be summarized as follows.14,16–19,47,49,52–56) First, there are evidences that not every home care programs are shown to be effective.55) However, when we reduce the scope and focus to the HBPC program, which meets the definition in Table 1, there are evidences that HBPCs have significant effects on reducing hospitalizations, hospital days, emergency and specialty visits, while unclear effects were identified on hospital readmission and nursing home days.16,19) Stall et al.19) concluded that consecutive home visits by primary care provider and a comprehensive approach by multidisciplinary teams are key factors for the program’s success. However, additional research is needed to conclude whether HBPC could lead to a decline in medical cost in South Korea (or other countries with less matured primary care system).
Second, HBPC shows effectiveness among frail older adults in particular.53,54,56) A recent systematic review of HBPC reported that “complex patients – those at highest risk of hospitalization (sicker) or most frail – have the most potential to benefit from HBPC.”16) This means that, in order to operate HBPC successfully, it is important to select the right person who are matched to the purpose of the program. Frail older adults might be the one of candidates. Third, especially from a financial standpoint, HBPC which combine both social and medical services are reported as more effective model. Oeseburg et al.18) reported that cost-effective services could be provided in the socioeconomic model (also referred to as the patient advocacy case management model) which provided more diverse social services within a patient-centered perspective. In a similar vein, social workers are increasingly recognized as important workforce in the HBPC setting.41,42,48)
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION
HBPC is a novel type of home care program that can reduce emergency department visit and unnecessary hospitalization rates among homebound older adults by providing integrated and continuous primary care services. As the population ages, policy makers are getting more interest in HBPC to reform the primary healthcare system, because evidence from systematic reviews and meta-analysis shows clinical effectiveness. Also, HBPC has clear evidences that increase patients and caregivers’ satisfaction. HBPC is anticipated to be further evolved in the following two directions. First, when if HBPC services are provided to the frail elderly, better results might be achieved in improving clinical outcome indicators, such as mortality, disability, fall, admission to long-term care facilities, quality of life, and caregiver burden. Second, when if HBPC are providing more diverse social services, better results might be achieve in reducing medical costs of older adults.
At least 600,000 of older adults (about 10% among entire population aged 65 and over) are estimated as homebound who may not go freely outside to use local outpatients clinics in South Korea. They are medically isolated population who are obviously excluded from the primary care system if no HBPC programs are available in their nearest hometown. However, until now, there is no previous research of HBPC in South Korea. We could not find any single case report which meets definition of Table 1. South Korea has a history that the family doctor registration system was tried to be initiated in 1996, but failed completely.57,58) Instead of reforming the entire primary care system, only nurse-led home care program was admitted to introduce in general hospital in 2001.59) A transitional care model was adopted for patients after discharge from hospital, and physicians were not allowed to visit patients’ home. As a result, only a few cases of doctor-led house call program have been reported in public health-care setting or in small private clinics for the purpose of humanitarian outreach service.60,61)
Nevertheless, demands for physician’s home visits are not even low in South Korea. According to the population survey, 88.6% of Koreans answered that they need a regular doctor for their own needs, and 90.3% answered that they need a regular doctor for their family’s needs.62) In addition, Song63) reported that 85% of employers, 81% of employees, and 86% of healthcare providers surveyed in 149 workplaces are willing to receive doctor-led work-place visiting services. Among older adults, demands for physician’s visits might be further increased, because unmet medical needs are associated with age.64) Recently, the metropolitan government of Seoul initiated the ‘Chat-Dong’; Home Visit Project by nurses and social workers for entire citizens of aged 65 years old. It is acknowledged as an integrated type of case management (socioeconomic model) which provide high levels of support, although there is no explicit role of physician in the project.65)
This article emphasize that contents of primary care for older adults should be different from that of the general population. From this point of view, the core contents of HBPC which are commonly observed in literatures are summarized. First, HBPC should be targeted primarily to homebound (or frail) older adults. Second, physicians should be included in the HBPC workforce to create interdisciplinary care team. Third, CGA should be conducted at initial home visit and interprofessional care meeting should be held regularly. Fourth, specific performance indicators such as rates of emergency department visits and unnecessary hospitalization should be monitored. Fifth, the following operational strategies need to be introduced to reduce medical costs of older adults: (1) strengthening the capacity of visiting nurses, (2) adopting a socioeconomic case management model, and (3) operating a 24-hour urgent telephone counseling system. These are important factors that should be reflected in the initial design when if the HBPC pilot project is introduced in South Korea in the future.
HBPC is a healthcare model that is currently getting much attention due to the potential of converting primary care services from outpatient clinic to home. It is anticipated that the proportion of older adults age 80 and over will sharply increase in the nearest future, so that public health concerns will also arise for community-dwelling but virtually isolated older adults from the primary care system. There are mixed prospects whether future HBPCs will be able to completely replace outpatient-centered primary care among the specific population, or to become a type of service within another integrated (or collaborative) primary care model.16) However, in South Korea, where there is little role of public healthcare sector in the primary care setting, HBPC may contain ‘symbolic’ meaning to show the public how importance of good primary care is needed for population health.15) The essential nature of medical care is not in the high technology but in the close relationship between patients (and their family) and healthcare providers. HBPC is, above all, the best practical model that could illustrate this kind of trust. In the future, it is necessary to have a heated debate concerning what is the most desirable primary care system for older adults in South Korea. In addition, empirical evidences on HBPC are much more needed in detail.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This study was supported by a grant of the Seokchun Caritas Foundation (2016-1).
Footnotes
The researchers claim no conflicts of interest.
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