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Revisits, Readmission, and Mortality From Emergency Department Admissions for Older Adults With Vague Presentations: Longitudinal Observational Study

Revisits, Readmission, and Mortality From Emergency Department Admissions for Older Adults With Vague Presentations: Longitudinal Observational Study

The goal of this work was to identify how the decision to admit drives subsequent revisit, readmission, and mortality among older adult patients with diagnoses that are syndromic (falls and weakness) or lacking a clear standard of practice (syncope, UTI, pneumonia, or cellulitis). This question was difficult to answer since patients with different disposition decisions differ in their clinical severity, complexity, and needs.

Sebastian Alejandro Alvarez Avendano, Amy Cochran, Valerie Odeh Couvertier, Brian Patterson, Manish Shah, Gabriel Zayas-Caban

JMIR Aging 2025;8:e55929

The Development and Use of a New Visual Tool (REVISIT) to Support Participant Recall: Web-Based Interview Study Among Older Adults

The Development and Use of a New Visual Tool (REVISIT) to Support Participant Recall: Web-Based Interview Study Among Older Adults

Final iteration: the final iteration of REVISIT includes edits to language used, such as “memory changes” instead of specific diagnoses, and “Moving Forward” instead of a “Post-Visit” heading. This version also reflects the omission of interview probe questions in the “Moving Forward" section. This sample REVISIT includes only fictional participant information. REVISIT: Remembering Healthcare Encounters Visually and Interactively.

Eileen M Dryden, Chitra Anwar, Jennifer Conti, Jacqueline H Boudreau, Meaghan A Kennedy, William W Hung, Kathryn A Nearing, Camilla B Pimentel, Lauren Moo

JMIR Form Res 2024;8:e52096

The Effect of an Automated Mobile Patient Engagement Application on Emergency Department Revisits: Prospective Observational Study

The Effect of an Automated Mobile Patient Engagement Application on Emergency Department Revisits: Prospective Observational Study

Any patient who was discharged home and experienced a visit to a Maryland emergency department within 30 days of discharge or who was admitted as an inpatient or observation patient to any Maryland hospital within 30 days of discharge was considered to have experienced a 30-day revisit.

Pothik Chatterjee, Adam M Beck, Jenna Ashley Levenson Brager, Daniel J Durand, Christopher R D'Adamo

JMIR Form Res 2021;5(12):e17839