People living with dementia face a heightened risk of returning to hospital after discharge. In a new analysis of routinely collected electronic healthcare records from England, researchers investigated which factors help predict subsequent readmission among patients with dementia. By focusing on real-world data from 30,527 individuals, the study aims to clarify how clinical and social variables combine to shape post-discharge outcomes.
The findings highlight that readmission is not driven by a single cause. Instead, it is associated with patient sex and with having multiple coexisting health conditions, suggesting that comorbidity increases vulnerability during the transition from inpatient to community care. This pattern is consistent with the broader clinical understanding that complex medical histories can complicate recovery and continuity of treatment.
The study also reports that post-discharge follow-up matters. Primary care appointments after leaving the hospital were linked to readmission, indicating that the timing, frequency, or need for follow-up may reflect both disease severity and gaps that emerge after discharge. The results further implicate medication management: medication reviews were associated with readmission, implying that pharmacological complexity and the necessity of regimen adjustment may be central to preventing—or detecting—deterioration.
Beyond individual healthcare factors, the researchers examined residential care status. Living in residential care was related to readmission risk, underscoring how care environments and monitoring practices can influence outcomes for people with dementia, particularly when symptoms fluctuate or support needs change rapidly.
Methodologically, the research uses a retrospective cohort design with observational data, enabling comparisons across groups while capturing the complexity of everyday clinical practice. Statistical modeling was used to identify determinants while accounting for patient characteristics available in electronic records.
Overall, the study frames hospital readmission as a multifactorial process, shaped by biology, treatment continuity, medication complexity, and the care setting. The authors argue that improving discharge pathways for dementia should integrate these determinants to reduce avoidable returns to hospital.
Subject of Research: Hospital readmission determinants in dementia patients
Article Title: Identifying the determinants of hospital readmission in dementia patients – A retrospective cohort study using electronic healthcare records in England
News Publication Date: 15-Jul-2026
Web References: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0351331
References: DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0351331
Image Credits: engin akyurt, Unsplash, CC0
Keywords: dementia; hospital readmission; electronic health records; comorbidity; primary care follow-up; medication review; residential care; cohort study
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