PubMed ID: 37077324
Author(s): Cao YJ, Wang Y, Mullahy J, Burns M, Liu Y, Smith M. The Relative Importance of Hospital Discharge and Patient Composition in Changing Post-Acute Care Utilization and Outcomes Among Medicare Beneficiaries. Health Serv Insights. 2023 Apr 14;16:11786329231166522. doi: 10.1177/11786329231166522. eCollection 2023. PMID 37077324
Journal: Health Services Insights, Volume 16, 2023
BACKGROUND The COVID-19 pandemic changed care delivery. But the mechanisms of changes were less understood.
OBJECTIVES Examine the extent to which the volume and pattern of hospital discharge and patient composition contributed to the changes in post-acute care (PAC) utilization and outcomes during the pandemic.
RESEARCH DESIGN Retrospective cohort study. Medicare claims data on hospital discharges in a large healthcare system from March 2018 to December 2020.
SUBJECTS Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries, 65 years or older, hospitalized for non-COVID diagnoses.
MEASURES Hospital discharges to Home Health Agencies (HHA), Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNF), and Inpatient Rehabilitation Facilities (IRF) versus home. Thirty- and ninety-day mortality and readmission rates. Outcomes were compared before and during the pandemic with and without adjustment for patient characteristics and/or interactions with the pandemic onset.
RESULTS During the pandemic, hospital discharges declined by 27%. Patients were more likely to be discharged to HHA (+4.6%, 95% CI [3.2%, 6.0%]) and less likely to be discharged to either SNF (-3.9%, CI [-5.2%, -2.7%]) or to home (-2.8% CI [-4.4%, -1.3%]). Thirty- and ninety-day mortality rates were significantly higher by 2% to 3% points post-pandemic. Readmission were not significantly different. Up to 15% of the changes in discharge patterns and 5% in mortality rates were attributable to patient characteristics.
CONCLUSIONS Shift in discharge locations were the main driver of changes in PAC utilization during the pandemic. Changes in patient characteristics explained only a small portion of changes in discharge patterns and were mainly channeled through general impacts rather than differentiated responses to the pandemic.
© The Author(s) 2023.