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Effect of Health Information Exchange Plus a Care Transitions Intervention on Post-Hospital Outcomes Among VA Primary Care Patients: a Randomized Clinical Trial.

Authors :
Boockvar, Kenneth S.
Koufacos, Nicholas S.
May, Justine
Schwartzkopf, Ashley L.
Guerrero, Vivian M.
Judon, Kimberly M.
Schubert, Cathy C.
Franzosa, Emily
Dixon, Brian E.
Source :
JGIM: Journal of General Internal Medicine; Dec2022, Vol. 37 Issue 16, p4054-4061, 8p, 1 Diagram, 4 Charts
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>Health information exchange (HIE) notifications when patients experience cross-system acute care encounters offer an opportunity to provide timely transitions interventions to improve care across systems.<bold>Objective: </bold>To compare HIE notification followed by a post-hospital care transitions intervention (CTI) with HIE notification alone.<bold>Design: </bold>Cluster-randomized controlled trial with group assignment by primary care team.<bold>Patients: </bold>Veterans 65 or older who received primary care at 2 VA facilities who consented to HIE and had a non-VA hospital admission or emergency department visit between 2016 and 2019.<bold>Interventions: </bold>For all subjects, real-time HIE notification of the non-VA acute care encounter was sent to the VA primary care provider. Subjects assigned to HIE plus CTI received home visits and telephone calls from a VA social worker for 30 days after arrival home, focused on patient activation, medication and condition knowledge, patient-centered record-keeping, and follow-up.<bold>Measures: </bold>Primary outcome: 90-day hospital admission or readmission.<bold>Secondary Outcomes: </bold>emergency department visits, timely VA primary care team telephone and in-person follow-up, patients' understanding of their condition(s) and medication(s) using the Care Transitions Measure, and high-risk medication discrepancies.<bold>Key Results: </bold>A total of 347 non-VA acute care encounters were included and assigned: 159 to HIE plus CTI and 188 to HIE alone. Veterans were 76.9 years old on average, 98.5% male, 67.8% White, 17.1% Black, and 15.1% other (including Hispanic). There was no difference in 90-day hospital admission or readmission between the HIE-plus-CTI and HIE-alone groups (25.8% vs. 20.2%, respectively; risk diff 5.6%; 95% CI - 3.3 to 14.5%, p = .25). There was also no difference in secondary outcomes.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>A care transitions intervention did not improve outcomes for veterans after a non-VA acute care encounter, as compared with HIE notification alone. Additional research is warranted to identify transitions services across systems that are implementable and could improve outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08848734
Volume :
37
Issue :
16
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
JGIM: Journal of General Internal Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
160480298
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-022-07397-5