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Effect of Hospital Readmission Reduction on Patients at Low, Medium, and High Risk of Readmission in the Medicare Population
Author(s) -
Blecker Saul,
Herrin Jeph,
Kwon Ji Young,
Grady Jacqueline N.,
Jones Simon,
Horwitz Leora I.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of hospital medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.128
H-Index - 65
eISSN - 1553-5606
pISSN - 1553-5592
DOI - 10.12788/jhm.2936
Subject(s) - medicine , emergency medicine , hospital readmission , retrospective cohort study , cohort , cardiorespiratory fitness , specialty , cohort study , family medicine
BACKGROUND Hospitalization and readmission rates have decreased in recent years, with the possible consequence that hospitals are increasingly filled with high‐risk patients. OBJECTIVE We studied whether readmission reduction has affected the risk profile of hospitalized patients and whether readmission reduction was similarly realized among hospitalizations with low, medium, and high risk of readmissions. DESIGN Retrospective study of hospitalizations between January 2009 and June 2015. PATIENTS Hospitalized fee‐for‐service Medicare beneficiaries, categorized into 1 of 5 specialty cohorts used for the publicly reported hospital‐wide readmission measure. MEASUREMENTS Each hospitalization was assigned a predicted risk of 30‐day, unplanned readmission using a risk‐adjusted model similar to publicly reported measures. Trends in monthly mean predicted risk for each cohort and trends in monthly observed to expected readmission for hospitalizations in the lowest 20%, middle 60%, and highest 20% of risk of readmission were assessed using time series models. RESULTS Of 47,288,961 hospitalizations, 16.2% (n = 7,642,161) were followed by an unplanned readmission within 30 days. We found that predicted risk of readmission increased by 0.24% ( P = .03) and 0.13% ( P = .004) per year for hospitalizations in the surgery/gynecology and neurology cohorts, respectively. We found no significant increase in predicted risk for hospitalizations in the medicine (0.12%, P = .12), cardiovascular (0.32%, P = .07), or cardiorespiratory (0.03%, P = .55) cohorts. In each cohort, observed to expected readmission rates steadily declined, and at similar rates for patients at low, medium, and high risk of readmission. CONCLUSIONS Hospitals have been effective at reducing readmissions across a range of patient risk strata and clinical conditions. The risk of readmission for hospitalized patients has increased for 2 of 5 clinical cohorts.