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Effects of Acute-Postacute Continuity on Community Discharge and 30-Day Rehospitalization Following Inpatient Rehabilitation

Authors :
James E. Graham
Kenneth J. Ottenbacher
Heidi Spratt
Janet Prvu Bettger
Gulshan Sharma
Addie Middleton
Source :
Health Services Research. 52:1631-1646
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Wiley, 2017.

Abstract

Objective To examine the effects of facility-level acute–postacute continuity on probability of community discharge and 30-day rehospitalization following inpatient rehabilitation. Data Sources We used national Medicare enrollment, claims, and assessment data to study 541,097 patients discharged from 1,156 inpatient rehabilitation facilities (IRFs) in 2010–2011. Study Design We calculated facility-level continuity as the percentages of an IRF's patients admitted from each contributing acute care hospital. Patients were categorized into three groups: low continuity ( 75 percent from same hospital). The multivariable models included an interaction term to examine the potential moderating effects of facility type (freestanding facility vs. hospital-based rehabilitation unit) on the relationships between facility-level continuity and our two outcomes: community discharge and 30-day rehospitalization. Principal Findings Medicare beneficiaries in hospital-based rehabilitation units were more likely to be referred from a high-contributing hospital compared to those in freestanding facilities. However, the association between higher acute–postacute continuity and desirable outcomes is significantly better in freestanding rehabilitation facilities than in hospital-based units. Conclusions Improving continuity is a key premise of health care reform. We found that both observed referral patterns and continuity-related benefits differed markedly by facility type. These findings provide a starting point for health systems establishing or strengthening acute–postacute relationships to improve patient outcomes in this new era of shared accountability and public quality reporting programs.

Details

ISSN :
00179124
Volume :
52
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Health Services Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c5baf16aad935b51263ece986b57f6b0