avoidable hospital readmissions

Some Readmissions From Nursing Homes to Hospitals Hard to Avoid

Improvements in the delivery of care cannot prevent some skilled nursing facility patients from being readmitted to hospitals, a new study has concluded. According to the study, when advanced practice nurses brought best practices to 16 nursing homes participating in a Medicare pilot program, they enjoyed considerable success reducing hospital readmissions but found themselves unable to stop some, including readmissions caused by residents or their families calling ambulances on their own; patients refusing treatment and then demanding hospitalization because of the effects of the denied treatment; and patients in hospice deciding they want surgery. These were among the findings in [...]

2019-06-07T06:00:44-04:00June 7, 2019|Medicare post-acute care|

Time to Raise the Bar on Preventable Hospital Readmissions?

A new report suggests that hospitals can have the greatest impact on reducing preventable readmissions within seven days of discharge and not through the 30-day mark at which they are currently judged by Medicare. According to a study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, Early readmissions were more likely to be preventable and amenable to hospital-based interventions.  Late readmissions were less likely to be preventable and were more amenable to ambulatory and home-based interventions. The study, conducted at 10 academic medical centers and involving more than 800 of their patients who had been readmitted to the hospital, concludes that [...]

2018-05-03T06:00:37-04:00May 3, 2018|Medicare, Medicare regulations|

CMS Nursing Home Program Cuts Hospital Admissions

An experimental Medicare program has helped nursing homes reduce the frequency with which their residents are admitted to hospitals. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ Initiative to Reduce Avoidable Hospitalizations Among Nursing Facility Residents has reduced avoidable hospitalizations among nursing facility residents 17 percent in the program’s three years. 143 nursing homes in seven states participated in the program, which employed third-party vendors, known as enhanced care and coordination providers, to provide education to nursing facility staff. Hospitals, too, can benefit from the program because it may help reduce avoidable hospital readmissions for which they are penalized financially by [...]

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