This paper demonstrates how a single assessment tool can be linked to intermediate care services eligibility criteria to examine referrals and admissions to these services, by reporting on a project in a locality in East Kent. The project involved implementing a standardised patient assessment tool for three months in all intermediate care services, to examine the suitability of patients entering each of these intermediate care services. This paper focuses on the results of the community assessment rehabilitation team (CART), a recuperative care centre and the day hospital. After analysing patient assessments, we found that some patients in all intermediate care services were placed there inappropriately, and this was most evident in the day hospital. The paper concludes with considerations and suggestions for improving the effectiveness of assessment tools in practice.
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1 August 2004
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August 01 2004
Examining the Effectiveness and Suitability of Referral and Assessment in Intermediate Care Services Available to Purchase
K Kotiadis;
K Kotiadis
Centre for Health Service Studies, University of Kent
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G Carpenter;
G Carpenter
Centre for Health Service Studies, University of Kent
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M Mackenzie
M Mackenzie
Centre for Health Service Studies, University of Kent
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2042-8685
Print ISSN: 1476-9018
© Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2004
Journal of Integrated Care (2004) 12 (4): 42–48.
Citation
Kotiadis K, Carpenter G, Mackenzie M (2004), "Examining the Effectiveness and Suitability of Referral and Assessment in Intermediate Care Services". Journal of Integrated Care, Vol. 12 No. 4 pp. 42–48, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/14769018200400031
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