| Literature DB >> 27993163 |
Andrew McWilliams1,2, Jason Roberge3, Charity G Moore4, Avery Ashby3, Whitney Rossman4, Stephanie Murphy5, Stephannie McCall5, Ryan Brown5, Shannon Carpenter6, Scott Rissmiller6, Scott Furney7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hospital readmissions remain highly prevalent despite being the target of policies and financial penalties. Evidence comparing the effectiveness and costs of interventions to reduce readmissions is lacking, leaving healthcare systems with little guidance on how to improve quality and avoid costly penalties. Effective interventions likely need to bridge inpatient and outpatient settings, incorporate information technology, and use dedicated providers. Such complex innovations will require rigorous evaluation. The framework of quality improvement research provides an approach that both improves care locally and contributes to closing the current knowledge gaps for readmissions. In this trial, we will study a comprehensive intervention that incorporates these recommendations into an integrated practice unit, called transition services, with an aim of reducing 30-day readmission rates. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27993163 PMCID: PMC5168819 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-016-1725-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Study design and patient flow
Fig. 2Pragmatic-Explanatory Continuum Indicator Summary 2 (PRECIS-2) tool. This framework contains nine domains representing the applicability of the trial’s eventual results to real-world healthcare settings
Transition services program intervention components
| Transition services components | Transition recommendations [ |
|---|---|
| Referral to transition services program and introduction by patient navigator while patient is still hospitalized | • Dedicated transition personnel |
| Comprehensive postdischarge evaluation by internal medicine physician | • Dedicated transition personnel |
| Postdischarge medication reconciliation by a pharmacist | • Dedicated transition personnel |
| In-home virtual appointments | • Home-based interventions |
| 24/7 availability of dedicated paramedicine team for in-home visits | • Home-based interventions |
| Multidisciplinary team (internal medicine, pharmacist, paramedicine, behavioral health, and care management providers) | • Dedicated transition personnel |
| Regular care management contact starting with discharge follow-up call and weekly thereafter | • Dedicated transition personnel |
| Real-time population health dashboards for clinic staff | • Integration of IT |
| Coordinated transition to the next appropriate care location after 30 days | • Spanning inpatient and outpatient |
IT Information technology
Fig. 3Patient-centered readmission. *The primary outcome is the difference in 30-day readmission rates between facilities. A readmission visit can be either an inpatient or an observation visit. Secondary outcomes include the difference in 30-day readmission rates between facilities. In one analysis, a readmission visit can only be an inpatient visit, and in another analysis a readmission visit can only be an observation visit
RE-AIM (Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, Maintenance) framework
| RE-AIM measure | Metrics |
|---|---|
| Reach: How do I reach the target population? | • Capture rate: proportion of patients interested in program participation out of those who are referred and appropriate at the time of discharge |
| Effectiveness: How do I know my intervention is effective? | • Absolute and observed/expected 30-day readmission rates as defined by CMS and reported as a routine quality metric by the healthcare system |
| Adoption: How do I develop organization support to deliver my intervention? | • Qualitative evaluation of program and participating primary care providers, which will be reported separately |
| Implementation: How do I ensure the intervention is delivered properly? | • Absolute and mean visit counts and visit type by month for the clinic as a whole and per patient |
| Maintenance: How do I incorporate the intervention so it is delivered over the long term? | • Institutional level: Reach, Effectiveness, and Implementation measures for 3 months after conclusion of trial |
CMS Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, ED Emergency department