Mostrando postagens com marcador Hospital readmissions. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Hospital readmissions. Mostrar todas as postagens

quinta-feira, 15 de janeiro de 2015

When used effectively, discharge summaries reduce hospital readmissions

 

New Yale research shows how effectively using discharge summaries can prevent hospital readmissions for heart failure patients.

For heart failure patients making the transition from hospital to home, a discharge summary that gets to their primary doctors quickly and contains detailed and useful information can mean the difference between recovering quickly or returning to the hospital, according to two studies from Yale School of Medicine researchers.

The findings are published by the Yale research team in the current issue of Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes.

In theory, a discharge summary is meant to help outside physicians understand what happened to patients while they were hospitalized, but in practice, it has served as an aid for medical billing, according to lead author Leora Horwitz, M.D., adjunct associate professor of internal medicine at Yale School of Medicine and director of the Center for Healthcare Innovation and Delivery Science at New York University Langone Medical Center. "The medical community hasn't really made full use of discharge summaries as a tool for transitions," she said.

Horwitz and her team analyzed data from Telemonitoring to Improve Heart Failure Outcomes (Tele-HF), a large multicenter study of patients hospitalized with heart failure. This data contained more than 1,500 discharge summaries from 46 hospitals across the country. Horwitz said in order for a discharge summary to do the job of making the transition from hospital to home safer, it needs three key factors: It has to be timely, it has to be sent to the outside physician, and it has to include useful information. "It's like a three-legged stool," she said. "All three need to be present in order for it to do its job."

In the first study, Horwitz and her team expected the summaries to be similar at all the hospitals they analyzed, but they found that hospitals varied widely in their performance. And even at the highest-performing hospitals, the quality of discharge summaries was insufficient in terms of timeliness, transmission, and content. No hospital consistently produced high-quality summaries in all domains.

In the second study using the same data from Tele-HF, the team looked at whether improving hospital practices regarding discharge summaries made a difference in hospital readmissions. They found that discharge summary quality was indeed associated with readmission risk; patients whose summaries included useful content or were sent to outside clinicians had lower readmission rates.

"This study tells us for the first time that it is actually worth spending the time and effort to improve discharge communication, and patients do seem to benefit," said Horwitz.


Story Source:

The above story is based on materials provided by Yale University. The original article was written by Karen N. Peart. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.


Journal References:

  1. M. S. Al-Damluji, K. Dzara, B. Hodshon, N. Punnanithinont, H. M. Krumholz, S. I. Chaudhry, L. I. Horwitz. Hospital Variation in Quality of Discharge Summaries for Patients Hospitalized With Heart Failure Exacerbation. Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes, 2015; DOI: 10.1161/CIRCOUTCOMES.114.001227
  2. M. S. Al-Damluji, K. Dzara, B. Hodshon, N. Punnanithinont, H. M. Krumholz, S. I. Chaudhry, L. I. Horwitz. Association of Discharge Summary Quality With Readmission Risk for Patients Hospitalized With Heart Failure Exacerbation. Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes, 2015; DOI: 10.1161/CIRCOUTCOMES.114.001476

 

quinta-feira, 12 de junho de 2014

Risk factors for hospital readmissions identified

 

June 11, 2014

Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center

According to researchers, about half of readmissions could be avoided. The goal of this single-center study was to identify at the time of discharge the factors that are strongly associated with readmission in patients with ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke. The study compared 79 stroke patients who were readmitted to the hospital within 30 days to 86 controls over an 18 month period.


Therefore, there is significant interest in identifying factors that influence readmission rates, especially those that can be identified prior to discharge. To pinpoint which stroke patients are most at risk, researchers at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center undertook a retrospective case-control study to determine factors associated with readmission within 30 days. The study is published in the June 11 online edition of the American Journal of Medical Quality.

"If you can recognize who is at risk, you can really focus on those people to try to make sure they are treated appropriately and followed closely," said Cheryl Bushnell, M.D., associate professor of neurology at Wake Forest Baptist and director of its Comprehensive Stroke Center.

The goal of this single-center study was to identify at the time of discharge the factors that are strongly associated with readmission in patients with ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke. The study compared 79 stroke patients who were readmitted to the hospital within 30 days to 86 controls over an 18 month period. There were no significant differences in age, gender or race-ethnicity between the stroke patients and controls.

The researchers found that readmitted patients were significantly more likely to have a prior diagnosis of congestive heart failure, coronary artery disease, cancer or absence of hyperlipidemia, elevated lipid (fat) levels in the blood. In addition, readmitted patients were more likely to have been hospitalized two or more times during the year prior to the initial stroke admission.

The findings suggest that stroke severity and number of hospitalizations within the year prior to the stroke admission are important predictors of subsequent readmission within 30 days, independent of other clinical factors, Bushnell said.

"If our model is validated in a larger study, it could then be used in electronic health records to provide a potentially reproducible, efficient and effective means of selecting patients most at risk for subsequent hospital readmission. A logical next step is to develop innovative tools and programs for stroke patients to keep patients from being readmitted," Bushnell said.

A limitation of the study was that data was collected solely at discharge, she said, adding that subsequent research will include evaluation of post-discharge data.


Story Source:

The above story is based on materials provided by Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Roy E. Strowd et al. Predictors of 30-Day Hospital Readmission Following Ischemic and Hemorrhagic Stroke. American Journal of Medical Quality, June 2014 DOI: 10.1177/1062860614535838