Characteristics of patients referred for assessment of decision-making capacity in the acute medical setting of an outer-metropolitan hospital-A retrospective case series.
Benignus LoganAisling M FleuryLillian WongSally FraserAnne BernardBen P WhitePublished in: Australasian journal on ageing (2019)
In this case series, 56% of patients had a diagnosis of dementia. Social isolation was common; 70% were not presently married, and 63% had no community services. For 90% of patients, the referral was to determine the person's capacity to make their own accommodation decisions-usually to return home on discharge. Of those with impaired capacity, 54% were discharged to residential aged care, whilst most who retained capacity were discharged home (73%). Those with impaired capacity were more likely to have a diagnosis of dementia and a prolonged length of stay (both P < 0.001).