Gillie Gabay1. 1. Head of Systemic Organizational Development, School of Behavioral Studies, College of Management Academic Studies, 7 Rabin Boulevard, Rishon Letzion 91750, Israel. Electronic address: gillie.gabay@gmail.com.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Although health promotion calls for patient empowerment, it is not integrated in reducing re-admissions. This study examines the link among patient perceived control, self-rated health and fewer hospital re-admissions. METHODS: An empirical explorative retrospective cross-sectional study with 208 respondents aged 40-65 with poor health and identical health plans. All measures hold good psychometric properties. RESULTS: Self-rated health was strongly related to fewer re-admissions. Perceived control moderated the relationship between self-rated health and fewer re-admissions. Perceived control and self-rated health, together, contributed 5.2% to the variance in re-admissions. CONCLUSION: Perceived control and perceived health status each explained a different share of the variance of re-admissions. Together, these perceptions reduced re-admissions by .40. Patient-clinician communication upon discharge may be a new direction to reduce re-admissions, improve delivery of care and promote health. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: To reduce re-admissions, managements need to invest in restructuring the patient discharge process. A physician-patient dialogue shaping patient perceptions about their health status, perceived room for health improvement, and available internal and external resources may make a difference. Findings stress the need to allocate more time and resources for discharge communication processes and for physician training on psycho-social skills that may empower patients upon discharge.
OBJECTIVE: Although health promotion calls for patient empowerment, it is not integrated in reducing re-admissions. This study examines the link among patient perceived control, self-rated health and fewer hospital re-admissions. METHODS: An empirical explorative retrospective cross-sectional study with 208 respondents aged 40-65 with poor health and identical health plans. All measures hold good psychometric properties. RESULTS: Self-rated health was strongly related to fewer re-admissions. Perceived control moderated the relationship between self-rated health and fewer re-admissions. Perceived control and self-rated health, together, contributed 5.2% to the variance in re-admissions. CONCLUSION: Perceived control and perceived health status each explained a different share of the variance of re-admissions. Together, these perceptions reduced re-admissions by .40. Patient-clinician communication upon discharge may be a new direction to reduce re-admissions, improve delivery of care and promote health. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: To reduce re-admissions, managements need to invest in restructuring the patient discharge process. A physician-patient dialogue shaping patient perceptions about their health status, perceived room for health improvement, and available internal and external resources may make a difference. Findings stress the need to allocate more time and resources for discharge communication processes and for physician training on psycho-social skills that may empower patients upon discharge.