ABSTRACT
Objectives
The quality of care for dementia in acute‐care settings has been criticised. In 2016, the Japanese universal health insurance system introduced a financial incentive scheme for dementia care by dementia specialist teams in acute‐care hospitals.
This study aimed to investigate the effectiveness of this financial incentive scheme on short‐term outcomes (in‐hospital mortality and 30‐day readmission).
Design
and Methods:Using a Japanese nationwide inpatient database, we identified older adult patients with moderate‐to‐severe dementia admitted for pneumonia, heart failure, cerebral infarction, urinary tract infection, intracranial injury, or hip fracture from April 2014 to March 2018. We selected 180 propensity score‐matched pairs of hospitals that adopted (n = 180 of 185) and that did not adopt (n = 180 of 744) the financial incentive scheme. We then conducted a patient‐level difference‐in‐differences analysis. In a sensitivity analysis, we restricted the post‐intervention group to patients who actually received dementia care.
Results
There was no association between a hospital’s adoption of the incentive scheme and in‐hospital mortality (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]: 0.97; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.88 to 1.06; p=0.48) or 30‐day readmission (aOR: 1.04; 95% CI: 0.95 to 1.14; p=0.37). Only 29% of patients in hospitals adopting the scheme actually received dementia care. The sensitivity analysis showed that receiving dementia care was associated with decreased in‐hospital mortality.
Conclusions
The financial incentive scheme to enhance dementia care by dementia specialist teams in Japan may not be working effectively, but the results do suggest that individual dementia care was associated with decreased in‐hospital mortality.
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