Articles Tagged With: readmissions
-
Monthly Calls Dramatically Cut ED Visits by Super-Users
Researchers at a Virginia hospital conducted a quality improvement project to get frequent ED visitors the care they needed and keep them out of the ED. The researchers identified the 50 top super-utilizing patients at Sentara Norfolk General Hospital’s ED in 2020 and contacted them about enrolling in a chronic care management program.
-
Ways to Improve Warm Handoffs and Transitions for Wound Care Patients
Warm handoffs and better patient/caregiver education on wound care can improve healing when patients are discharged. One way is to ask the patient for permission to take photos of the wound to show caregivers and community providers what it looked like at discharge.
-
Wound Care Patients Receive Inadequate Care Coordination and Follow-Up
Inadequately preparing patients and caregivers for wound care at home can be costly. Pressure ulcers can cost tens of thousands of dollars a year, per patient. Each patient with this wound needs costly supplies and a special hospital bed. Nurses must turn them every two hours.
-
Case Management Program Highlights Challenges of Working with High-Need Populations
Care coordinators and case managers know their work makes a positive difference in patients’ lives, but proving this is challenging. For example, the Camden Coalition Care Management Program demonstrated some positive outcomes related to high-cost, high-need patients, including increasing patients’ visits with providers within two weeks after their hospitalizations. However, it did not change their rate of readmissions.
-
‘Payvider’ Model Is a New Trend for Care Coordination and Addressing Social Needs
Case management and care coordination often are seen as ways to improve patient care outcomes, reduce readmissions, and make hospital-to-community care more efficient. However, resources remain limited in care coordination efforts because of the payment disincentive. A solution that is gaining steam is the “payvider” model.
-
Program to Improve Management of Heart Failure Shows Positive Results
Case management and care coordination programs that target heart failure patients with low socioeconomic positions can succeed in improving their outcomes, but it takes time and consistent effort across the continuum. The next step is to improve care management and care coordination through targeted, consistent, and persistent efforts.
-
Hospital-at-Home Programs Can Work — Even When the Home Is a Car
A case management-style hospital-at-home program produced $6 million in savings and cut hospitalizations by 53% in one year.
-
Large Medicare Data Study Shows Big Benefits with Primary Care Follow-Up
New research shows Medicare patients who are hospitalized with a condition that could require emergency general surgery are far less likely to be readmitted if they receive follow-up care with a primary care provider within 30 days of discharge.
-
Standardized Care Protocols at SNFs Improve Hospital Readmission Rates
New research shows how standardized care protocols can improve care and reduce readmission rates for patients with chronic conditions in skilled nursing facilities.
-
Sepsis Patients Need Transition Support to Prevent Rehospitalization
Post-acute care is crucial for sepsis survivors. It helps patients with functional recovery and can prevent readmissions. Research suggests post-acute care services may be underused. Fewer than half the patients discharged from the hospital receive care in skilled nursing facilities, with home health services, or in long-term care facilities.