New Long-Term Care Residents Who Potentially Could Have Been Cared for at Home
A low percentage is desirable for this indicator.
A higher percentage indicates a larger number of newly admitted long-term care residents who potentially could have been cared for at home with formal supports in place.
This indicator can help to
- Show when additional home supports could potentially delay or prevent early admission to long-term care;
- Demonstrate the importance of effective placement policies and services across the health care continuum; and
- Provide support for initiatives that help residents remain in their homes for as long as possible.
Unadjusted rate:
(Total number of newly admitted residents in a long-term care facility with a completed Resident Assessment Instrument–Minimum Data Set 2.0 [RAI-MDS 2.0] or interRAI Long-Term Care Facilities [LTCF] assessment that details clinical characteristics similar to those of home care clients who are living well in the community with formal supports) ÷ (Total number of newly admitted residents with a completed assessment in a given fiscal year) × 100
For more information, please see New Long-Term Care Residents Who Potentially Could Have Been Cared for at Home: Appendices (PDF).
Total number of newly admitted long-term care residents with completed RAI-MDS 2.0 © or interRAI LTCF © assessments in a given fiscal year.
Total number of newly admitted long-term care residents (incident cases) with a completed RAI-MDS 2.0 or interRAI LTCF assessment that details clinical characteristics similar to those of home care clients who are living well in the community with formal supports, defined by the following inclusions.
Methodology
Name
New Long-Term Care Residents Who Potentially Could Have Been Cared for at Home
Short/Other Names
Not applicable
Description
The percentage of newly admitted long-term care residents who have a clinical profile similar to the profile of clients cared for at home with formal supports in place.
Examples of formal home care supports include help with daily tasks such as bathing, dressing, eating and/or toileting.
Rationale
Delaying or preventing admission to a long-term care facility for persons whose needs could potentially be met through home care programs may help to
- Provide better experiences for clients, by supporting the desire of most seniors to remain at home for as long as possible; and
- Ensure that long-term care facilities have the capacity to provide care for residents with more complex health needs.
Interpretation
A low percentage is desirable for this indicator.
A higher percentage indicates a larger number of newly admitted long-term care residents who potentially could have been cared for at home with formal supports in place.
This indicator can help to
- Show when additional home supports could potentially delay or prevent early admission to long-term care;
- Demonstrate the importance of effective placement policies and services across the health care continuum; and
- Provide support for initiatives that help residents remain in their homes for as long as possible.
HSP Framework Dimension
ºìÁì½í¹Ï±¨ system outputs: Access to comprehensive, high-quality health services
Areas of Need
Living With Illness, Disability or Reduced Function
Targets/Benchmarks
Not applicable
Available Data Years
to (fiscal years)
Geographic Coverage
- Newfoundland and Labrador
- New Brunswick
- Nova Scotia
- Ontario
- Manitoba
- Saskatchewan
- Alberta
- British Columbia
- Yukon
Reporting Level/Disaggregation
- National
- Province/Territory
- Region
Indicator Results
Web Tool:
Update Frequency
Every year
Latest Results Update Date
Updates
Not applicable
Description
Unadjusted rate:
(Total number of newly admitted residents in a long-term care facility with a completed Resident Assessment Instrument–Minimum Data Set 2.0 [RAI-MDS 2.0] or interRAI Long-Term Care Facilities [LTCF] assessment that details clinical characteristics similar to those of home care clients who are living well in the community with formal supports) ÷ (Total number of newly admitted residents with a completed assessment in a given fiscal year) × 100
For more information, please see New Long-Term Care Residents Who Potentially Could Have Been Cared for at Home: Appendices (PDF).
Type of Measurement
Percentage or proportion
Denominator
Description:
Total number of newly admitted long-term care residents with completed RAI-MDS 2.0 © or interRAI LTCF © assessments in a given fiscal year.
Inclusions:
- Assessments completed in a long-term care facility (SECTOR_CODE = 4 for provinces/territories submitting to the Continuing Care Reporting System [CCRS])
- Sex coded as male or female
- First assessment completed in a fiscal year for residents who had not been assessed in the last 5 years with a RAI-MDS 2.0 or interRAI LTCF assessment
- Province/territory code available
Exclusions:
- Assessments done in the hospital-based continuing care sector (for provinces/territories submitting to CCRS)
- Residents missing any assessments for numerator definition (i.e., Cognitive Performance Scale, ADL (Activities of Daily Living) Self-Performance Hierarchy Scale, falls, verbal or physical abuse, wandering)
- Residents without valid age recorded, schizophrenia diagnosis, bipolar disorder diagnosis, and living situation prior to admission (these covariates are used in risk adjustment)
- Residents admitted for a short length of stay:
- Discharge projected within 90 days (Q1C_STAY_SHORT_DURATION = 1 or 2 for RAI-MDS 2.0 or Q2 = 0, 1, 2 or 3 for interRAI LTCF) and
- Length of stay at discharge for the resident (DISCHARGE_LOS_DAYS ≤120 days)
- Residents whose first assessments were quarterly assessments
- Residents receiving care in facilities that did not submit to CCRS or to the Integrated interRAI Reporting System (IRRS) in Q4 (January 1 to March 31) of the previous fiscal year
Numerator
Description:
Total number of newly admitted long-term care residents (incident cases) with a completed RAI-MDS 2.0 or interRAI LTCF assessment that details clinical characteristics similar to those of home care clients who are living well in the community with formal supports, defined by the following inclusions.
Inclusions:
- Long-term care residents with a completed assessment that details the following combination of characteristics:
- Cognitive Performance Scale = 0, 1 or 2
- ADL Hierarchy Scale = 0, 1 or 2
- No falls in the past 30 days
- Not physically abusive in the past 7 days (RAI-MDS 2.0) or 3 days (interRAI LTCF)*
- Not verbally abusive in the past 7 days (RAI-MDS 2.0) or 3 days (interRAI LTCF)*
- Did not wander in the past 7 days (RAI-MDS 2.0) or 3 days (interRAI LTCF)*
* The Assessment Reference Date (ARD) is the end of the observation period for items on the RAI-MDS 2.0 or interRAI LTCF assessment. The look-back period for most RAI-MDS 2.0 items is 7 days. The look-back period for most interRAI LTCF items is 3 days.
For more information, please see New Long-Term Care Residents Who Potentially Could Have Been Cared for at Home: Appendices (PDF).
Method of Adjustment
Logistic regression
Adjustment Applied
Covariates used in risk adjustment:
Adjusted rate:
The following covariates are used in risk adjustment:
Individual covariates: age group, sex, schizophrenia diagnosis, bipolar disorder diagnosis, and whether a resident lived alone prior to admission to a long-term care facility.
Geographic Assignment
Place of residence or service
Data Sources
Caveats and Limitations
This indicator is a starting point to measure the percentage of newly admitted long-term care residents who potentially could have been cared for at home with formal supports in place and can be further refined as data collection across provinces/territories improves.
- Provinces and territories offer different levels of publicly funded services outside of long-term care; this indicator focuses on persons who could live well at home with access to formal home care supports.
- This indicator considers only newly admitted long-term care residents; other long-term care residents could also potentially be supported outside the long-term care setting if other forms of supports were accessible to them (e.g., assisted or supportive living).
- The response sets and look-back periods for the assessment items used to identify residents who potentially could have been cared for at home differ between the RAI-MDS 2.0 and interRAI LTCF assessments.
- This indicator data is not linked, which means we are unable to trace the care pathway of newly admitted long-term care residents (e.g., from hospital or community) to understand their needs prior to admission to long-term care.
- This indicator includes data submitted by publicly funded long-term care facilities and excludes private long-term care, assisted or supportive living, and retirement homes.
Trending Issues
Regional and provincial trends (e.g., weakening, improving) may differ due to differences in data availability. For example, there may be 5 years of provincial results available but only 3 years of regional results.
References
- British Columbia Ministry of ºìÁì½í¹Ï±¨, Canadian Institute for ºìÁì½í¹Ï±¨ Information. Modelling Impact Changes to the Community Care and Assisted Living Act in British Columbia. 2018.
- Canadian Institute for ºìÁì½í¹Ï±¨ Information. Seniors in Transition: Exploring Pathways Across the Care Continuum (PDF). 2017.
- Gruneir A, Forrester J, Camacho X, et al. . BMC Geriatrics. 2013.
- Gaugler J, Yu F, Krichbaum K, et al. . Medical Care. 2009.
- Jutan NM. . UWSpace. August 2010.
- Luppa M, Luck T, Weyerer S, et al. . Age and Ageing. 2010.
- Office of the Seniors Advocate British Columbia. . 2019.
How to cite:
Canadian Institute for ºìÁì½í¹Ï±¨ Information. New Long-Term Care Residents Who Potentially Could Have Been Cared for at Home. Accessed January 4, 2025.
If you would like ºìÁì½í¹Ï±¨information in a different format, visit our Accessibility page.
Comments
This indicator belongs to the Shared ºìÁì½í¹Ï±¨ Priorities portfolio measuring access to mental health and addictions services and to home and community care.
More information on this indicator is available in the 2020 companion report (PDF).
RAI-MDS 2.0 © interRAI Corporation, Washington, D.C., 1995, 1997, 1999. Modified with permission for Canadian use under licence to the Canadian Institute for ºìÁì½í¹Ï±¨ Information.
RAI-HC © interRAI Corporation, Washington, D.C., 1994, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2001. Modified with permission for Canadian use under licence to the Canadian Institute for ºìÁì½í¹Ï±¨ Information.
interRAI LTCF © interRAI Corporation, Washington, D.C., 1990–2011. Modified with permission for Canadian use under licence to the Canadian Institute for ºìÁì½í¹Ï±¨ Information.