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Preventability of Early Versus Late Hospital Readmissions in a National Cohort of General Medicine Patients.

Authors :
Graham KL
Auerbach AD
Schnipper JL
Flanders SA
Kim CS
Robinson EJ
Ruhnke GW
Thomas LR
Kripalani S
Vasilevskis EE
Fletcher GS
Sehgal NJ
Lindenauer PK
Williams MV
Metlay JP
Davis RB
Yang J
Marcantonio ER
Herzig SJ
Source :
Annals of internal medicine [Ann Intern Med] 2018 Jun 05; Vol. 168 (11), pp. 766-774. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 May 01.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background: Many experts believe that hospitals with more frequent readmissions provide lower-quality care, but little is known about how the preventability of readmissions might change over the postdischarge time frame.<br />Objective: To determine whether readmissions within 7 days of discharge differ from those between 8 and 30 days after discharge with respect to preventability.<br />Design: Prospective cohort study.<br />Setting: 10 academic medical centers in the United States.<br />Patients: 822 adults readmitted to a general medicine service.<br />Measurements: For each readmission, 2 site-specific physician adjudicators used a structured survey instrument to determine whether it was preventable and measured other characteristics.<br />Results: Overall, 36.2% of early readmissions versus 23.0% of late readmissions were preventable (median risk difference, 13.0 percentage points [interquartile range, 5.5 to 26.4 percentage points]). Hospitals were identified as better locations for preventing early readmissions (47.2% vs. 25.5%; median risk difference, 22.8 percentage points [interquartile range, 17.9 to 31.8 percentage points]), whereas outpatient clinics (15.2% vs. 6.6%; median risk difference, 10.0 percentage points [interquartile range, 4.6 to 12.2 percentage points]) and home (19.4% vs. 14.0%; median risk difference, 5.6 percentage points [interquartile range, -6.1 to 17.1 percentage points]) were better for preventing late readmissions.<br />Limitation: Physician adjudicators were not blinded to readmission timing, community hospitals were not included in the study, and readmissions to nonstudy hospitals were not included in the results.<br />Conclusion: Early readmissions were more likely to be preventable and amenable to hospital-based interventions. Late readmissions were less likely to be preventable and were more amenable to ambulatory and home-based interventions.<br />Primary Funding Source: Association of American Medical Colleges.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1539-3704
Volume :
168
Issue :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Annals of internal medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29710243
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7326/M17-1724