Randomised controlled trial of GP-led in-hospital management of homeless people ('Pathway')

Nigel Hewett, Peter Buchman, Jeflyn Musariri, Christopher Sargeant, Penny Johnson, Kushala Abeysekera, Louise Grant, Emily A. Oliver, Christopher Eleftheriades, Barry McCormick, Aidan Halligan, Nadine Marlin, Sally Kerry, Graham R. Foster

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Homeless people have complex problems. GP enhanced care (Pathway) has shown benefits. We performed a randomised, -parallel arm trial at two large inner city hospitals. Inpatient homeless adults were randomly allocated to either standard care (all management by the hospital-based clinical team) or enhanced care with input from a homeless care team. The hospital data system provided healthcare usage information, and we used questionnaires to assess quality of life. 206 patients were allocated to enhanced care and 204 to usual care. Length of stay (up to 90 days after admission) did not differ between groups (standard care 14.0 days, enhanced care 13.3 days). Average reattendance at the emergency department within a year was 5.8 visits in the standard care group and 4.8 visits with enhanced care, but this decrease was not significant. -Quality of life scores after discharge (in 108 patients) improved with enhanced care (EQ-5D-5L score increased by 0.12 [95% CI 0.032 to 0.22] compared wtih 0.03 [-0.1 to 0.15; p=0.076] with standard care). The proportion of people sleeping on the streets after discharge was 14.6% in the standard care arm and 3.8% in the enhanced care arm (p=0.034). The quality-of-life cost per quality-adjusted life-year was £26,000. The Pathway approach doesn't alter length of stay but improves quality of life and reduces street -homelessness.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)223-229
    Number of pages7
    JournalClinical medicine (London, England)
    Volume16
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Jun 2016

    Keywords

    • addiction
    • Homeless
    • mental health
    • Pathway
    • randomised controlled trial
    • service provision

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