Abstract
The present study aimed to 1) illustrate the situations of intermediate care according to the Ministry
of Public Health’s policy. Seventeen healthcare facilities providing acceptable intermediate care to
patients with stroke, traumatic brain injury (TBI), and spinal cord injury (SCI) were multi-stage sampled
from the Ministry of Public Health provider sampling frame of 897 hospitals. Questionnaire with item-objective
congruence index (IOC) of 0.6–1.00 was the tool used for data collection during September 2019
to March 2020. Electronic data related to inpatient intermediate care were alternative study data source.
The data were analyzed with descriptive (frequency, percentage, mean, standard deviation) and inferential
statistics (median test, paired t-test, t-test, Pearson correlation). The findings showed that the selected
hospitals were divided based on service data into 3 groups: 1) intensive intermediate care services,
2) moderate intermediate care services, and 3) moderate intermediate care services with limited evidence
from questionnaire and individual inpatient data. The majority of patients were stroke. Group 1 community
hospitals had longer length of stay (LOS) than other groups in all 3 conditions; stroke 9.2 days, TBI
13.6 days and SCI 26.8 days. The average medical expense per visit for out-patients with SCI in the provincial
hospitals from group 1 was the highest; 30,458 baht. The average medical expense per visit for
in-patients with SCI in the hospitals from group 1 was the highest; 57,254 baht. The patients with SCI
from community hospitals in group 1 had the highest re-admission rate of 38.1 per cent. The Barthel
index (BI) at discharge was higher than on admission date for stroke (paired t- test(3,423) = 30.82, p < 0.01),
TBI (paired t-test(88) = 3.64, p < 0.01), and SCI (paired t-test(104) = 3.05, p < 0.01). The stroke patients in
group 1 hospitals showed better patient functional improvement by higher improvement in Barthel index
(IBI) than in group 2 hospitals (4.0 vs 1.8, independent t-test 3,381 = 12.51, p < 0.01). The medical expense
had positive correlation with LOS of 3 conditions (CSI r = 0.98, p < 0.01; TBI r = 0.53, p < 0.01 and stroke
r = 0.17, p < 0.01). The IBI of stroke had negative correlation with LOS (r = -0.044, p < 0.05) and with age
(r = -0.035, p < 0.05). In conclusion, the intermediate care with intensive rehabilitation to enhance
clinical effectiveness should be continuously supported.