| Literature DB >> 28182162 |
Michael Mileski1, Joseph Baar Topinka1, Kimberly Lee1, Matthew Brooks1, Christopher McNeil1, Jenna Jackson1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The main objective was to investigate the applicability and effectiveness of quality improvement initiatives in decreasing the rate of avoidable 30-day, skilled nursing facility (SNF)-to-hospital readmissions. PROBLEM: The rate of rehospitalizations from SNF within 30 days of original discharge has increased within the last decade.Entities:
Keywords: Medicare; finance; hospital; quality improvement; readmissions; skilled nursing; transfers
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28182162 PMCID: PMC5283071 DOI: 10.2147/CIA.S123362
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Interv Aging ISSN: 1176-9092 Impact factor: 4.458
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews flow diagram.
Abbreviations: CINAHL, Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature; PFP, pay-for-performance; SNF, skilled nursing facilities.
Studies selected for review and a summary of design, methods, and results
| Author/date/location | Aim | Sample/settings | Methods | Assessment tool | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bisiani and Jurgens | Evaluate and compare two care management models on 30-day hospital readmission rates | 13,000 medical records prior and 978 medical records after intervention from a Community Hospital | Retrospective, quasi-experimental, interrupted time series | Medical record data | Patient characteristics, addition of positions, and modification of workflows did not impact hospital readmission rates from SNFs |
| Meehan et al | Evaluate the impact of INTERACT QIO-training on decreasing 30-day hospital readmissions from SNFs | Staff from 5 SNFs in surrounding community with ≥40 beds and ≥10% 30-day medicare beneficiary readmission rates | Retrospective, quasi-experimental, mixed methods | Hospitalization tracking tool data; staff-reported contact log; staff surveys | Mixed clinical results |
| Wood | Define causes of hospital readmission of cardiac surgery patients from a SNF and test impact of education on 30-day readmission rate | All cardiac surgery patients discharged from the Medical Center to a SNF and the 20 nurses at that SNF | Retrospective, quasi-experimental, mixed methods | Medical record data, initial nursing survey; pre-test and post-intervention test | Evidence of a knowledge deficit and an educational need among the SNF staff nurses caring for cardiac surgery patients |
| Lu et al | Determine if QI initiative focused on discharge orders and medication reconciliation at a hospital can decrease 30-day readmissions from patients discharged to SNFs | A designated intervention group of 87 patients and a control group of 1,893 patients discharged to SNFs from a teaching hospital | Retrospective, quasi-experimental, interrupted time series | Medical record data | Standardized discharge order reconciliation with pharmacist involvement in medication reconciliation led to decreased readmission rates for patients discharged from a hospital to SNFs |
| Sandvik et al | Evaluate the effectiveness of universal patient transfer protocols and a collaborative community forum on reducing 30-day readmission rates from hospitals to SNFs | 705 Medicare patients discharged from the hospital to SNFs | Retrospective, quasi-experimental, cross-sectional | Medicare claims data; surveys | Standardized transfer forms and processes developed between hospitals and SNFs help to reduce 30-day readmission rates |
| Maly et al | Determine if hospital-SNF collaboration using physician partnerships, education, telemedicine, and EMR sharing can reduce 30-day readmission | A community hospital system and 29 surrounding SNFs | Retrospective, quasi-experimental, cross-sectional | Medicare claims data | SNFs with a medical director affiliated with the referring hospital had lower all-cause hospital readmission rates |
| Ouslander et al | Determine if the QI program INTERACT II could reduce hospital readmission rates from SNFs | 25 participating SNFs and 11 comparison SNFs located in Florida, Massachusetts, and New York | Retrospective, quasi-experimental, interrupted time series | Surveys: medical record data; SNF reported data | SNFs with the highest engagement in the QI program had the greatest reduction in hospital readmission rates |
| Ouslander et al | Determine the frequency and diagnosis associated with 7- and 30-day hospital readmissions from SNFs | 3,254 Medicare patients 75 and older who were discharged from a 350-bed nonteaching community hospital to a SNF | Retrospective, quasi-experimental, cross-sectional | Medical record data | CHF, renal failure, UTI, pneumonia, and COPD were the most common diagnosis associated with hospital readmissions from SNFs |
| Berkowitz et al | Evaluate an intervention to improved discharged disposition from a skilled nursing recuperative services unit of a hospital | 862 patients discharged before the intervention and 863 during the intervention from a 50-bed SNU associated with a hospital | Prospective, quasi-experimental interrupted time series | Administrative discharge disposition data; MDS assessment data | Standardized admission procedures, palliative care consultations, multidisciplinary conferences within a skilled nursing facility led to a decline in readmissions to acute care |
| Ouslander et al | Test tools and strategies designed to assist SNFs in reducing potentially avoidable hospitalizations over 6 months | Ten pre-intervention hospitalizations were compared to 65 post-intervention hospitalizations from 3 different SNFs | Prospective, quasi-experimental interrupted time series | Direct observation; survey; MDS data; Medicare data | Despite only partial implementation, the quality improvement initiative was associated with a 50% reduction in the overall rate of potentially avoidable hospitalizations |
Abbreviations: CHF, congestive heart failure; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; EMR, electronic medical record; INTERACT, intervention to reduce acute care transfers; MDS, minimum data set; QIO, quality improvement organization; SNFs, skilled nursing facilities; SNU, skilled nursing unit; UTI, urinary tract infection.
Themes associated with quality initiatives to reduce 30-day SNF-to-hospital readmissions
| References | Positive facilitators | Negative barriers |
|---|---|---|
| Bisiani and Jurgens | 1. Identification of at-risk patients can help tailor treatment | 1. Point of entry RN care manager and case. Management assistants do not reduce readmission rates |
| 2. Collaborative case management associated with lower readmissions | 2. Modification of work flows did not reduce readmission rates | |
| 3. Interventions saved $412 per patient | 3. Challenge in finding experienced case managers | |
| 4. Post-discharge telephone call reduces readmission | ||
| 5. Use of a post-discharge advocate nurse | ||
| 6. Senior leadership develop service design and strategy | ||
| 7. Medication reconciliation decreased adverse events, lowers hospital readmissions | ||
| 8. Use of the modified brokerage case management model | ||
| Meehan et al | 1. INTERACT | 1. Some leaders did not see compelling reason to participate |
| 2. Conducting root cause analyses of transferred residents | 2. Additional support needed to bring about QI initiatives, not enough time | |
| 3. Providing SNF institutional information to local emergency departments | 3. Not all the QI tools were implemented equally | |
| 4. Leadership is critical to success of QI initiatives | 4. Staff lacked technologic capabilities to use hospital tracking tools | |
| 5. SBAR form and progress note | ||
| Wood | 1. Use of the Shewhart cycle of plan-do-check-act and state action on avoidable rehospitalizations | 1. Insufficient education among SNF staff in cardiac care |
| 2. Knowledge gap in cardiac care identified, education provided in assessment, care, and interventions | 2. Patients being readmitted for preventable or manageable conditions | |
| 3. Nurse practitioner involvement | 3. Only 75% of staff returned educational surveys and tests | |
| Lu et al | 1. Including pharmacists on multidisciplinary team helps reduce readmission rates | 1. One study did not show significant reduction following medication reconciliation, medication errors are common in SNFs |
| 2. Use of a standard discharge order reconciliation process and not discharging after 2 pm | 2. Two extreme severity of illness groups did not have statistical reductions in readmission rates. The illness is more important than medication reconciliation | |
| 3. Medication reconciliation and 2–4 day follow up reduces hospital readmissions | ||
| 4. Improving electronic workflow reduced medication errors | ||
| 5. Limited financial resources required for meaningful results | ||
| 6. Executive leaders supported evidence-based changes | ||
| 7. Pharmacist involvement in medication reconciliation reduced discrepancies | ||
| Sandvik et al | 1. Geriatric community forum used to promote multidisciplinary collaboration | 1. Challenges with implementation and staff engagement. Little coordination between facilities, physicians, and hospitals |
| 2. Nurse-to-nurse telephone report using SBAR | 2. Low readmission rate could reflect poor-quality choices | |
| 3. Using a single set of forms with checklists during patient transfer | 3. Transfer forms not always completed by sending physicians | |
| 4. Medication list with diagnosis for each medication and comments helps to reduce errors | 4. Personnel turn over causes loss of institutional knowledge and continuity of QI project | |
| 5. Advanced directive form can reduce undesired hospitalizations | 5. Hospitalists with less nursing home experience overall began completing transfers | |
| 6. Universal documentation with prompts, safety reminders, and checklists | 6. Improper transfer of patient data, improper documentation, missing orders had been prior issue | |
| Maly et al | 1. Collaborative partner prioritization tool | 1. Aligning hospitals and SNFs requires like-minded leaders that are willing to invest time and effort |
| 2. Use of SBAR communication tool | 2. QI project needs time to grow in order to track and report findings | |
| 3. Hospital/SNF collaboration involving patient information and clinical educational resources | ||
| 4. Sharing of protocols for care of patients with congestive heart failure, post-myocardial infarction, and pneumonia | ||
| 5. Telehealth neurologic consults | ||
| 6. Physician form for aligning goals and sharing interest | ||
| Ouslander et al | 1. QI intervention using INTERACT II | 1. Challenges with implementation were found |
| 2. Leadership participated with in-person and telephone meetings | 2. SNF self-reporting of hospitalizations might not be accurate. Seasonal variation in hospitalizations | |
| 3. Improved advanced care planning and consideration of palliative care | 3. Four SNFs dropped out do to loss of champion or administrator | |
| 4. Staff attended 4–6 hours of orientation | 4. Cost of QI intervention is ~$15,400 per year. Less-costly initiatives are needed | |
| 5. Managing conditions proactively to prevent them from becoming more severe | 5. Leaders have completing goals including census goals, preparation for surveys, and other QI initiatives | |
| 6. Printed forms for SNF administrators to review cause of acute transfers | 6. Physicians and mid-level providers were not actively engaged in using QI tools | |
| 7. Pocket card and half-page report forms and progress note templates | ||
| 8. Envelopes for transfer documents with checklist on outside | ||
| 9. Longer serving SNF administrators and lower RN turnover | ||
| 10. Use of a staff member as a QI champion | ||
| Ouslander et al | 1. Guidelines developed to reduce readmissions for common causes of rehospitalization | 1. Staffing challenges are biggest barrier |
| 2. Data support the need to monitor SNF quality to reduce readmissions | 2. Medicare fee-for-service system and declining reimbursement do not incentivize continued care of sicker patients | |
| 3. Managed care programs that use physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants | ||
| 4. Implementation of just some of the guidelines showed positive outcomes | ||
| Berkowitz et al | 1. Physician admission procedures were standardized | 1. No criteria for physician judgment on the appropriateness of patient transfers to the hospital |
| 2. Patients with 3+ prior hospital admissions in past 6 months got palliative care consult. More likely to die outside of acute care setting according to wishes. Use of hospice teams to give palliative consults | 2. Intervention would need to be adapted for facilities without onsite medical staff | |
| 3. Bimonthly multidisciplinary root cause analysis conferences for patients fitting within readmission parameters to review whether or not readmissions could have been prevented | 3. SNFs are not always reimbursed for the extra care high acuity patients require | |
| 4. Medication reconciliation template | ||
| 5. Use of a nurse practitioner and on site medical staff can assess acute medical conditions quickly | ||
| 6. A lessons learned email was sent out to direct care staff | ||
| 7. The shaping long-term care in America project data can be used to compare QI success | ||
| Ouslander et al | 1. QI using the INTERACT | 1. Participation varied and no SNF implemented all the QI tools |
| 2. Use of physicians, nurse practitioners, or physician assistants | 2. The SBAR communication tool and “Stop and Watch” tool for CNAs were viewed as too much paperwork | |
| 3. The leadership panel was aware of QI purpose and may have been biased in reporting. Not a controlled study | ||
| 4. Physicians and mid-level providers were not engaged in QI despite multiple communications |
Abbreviations: CNA, certified nursing assistant; INTERACT, intervention to reduce acute care transfers; QI, quality improvement; RN, registered nurse; SBAR, situation background assessment recommendation; SNFs, skilled nursing facilities.
Facilitating themes associated with reduced 30-day skilled nursing facilities-to-hospital readmissions
| Facilitator themes | Occurrences (by article number) | Sum (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Specialized staff | 11, 13, 14, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 | 8 (13) |
| Quality improvement model | 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 17, 20 | 7 (11) |
| Collaborative case management | 11, 12, 14, 15, 16, 17 | 6 (10) |
| Care paths | 11, 14, 16, 17, 18 | 5 (8) |
| Leadership engagement | 11, 12, 14, 16, 17 | 5 (8) |
| Patient transfer protocol | 11, 14, 15, 17, 19 | 5 (8) |
| Communication tools | 12, 15, 16, 17 | 4 (6) |
| Medication reconciliation | 11, 14, 15, 19 | 4 (6) |
| Advanced and palliative care planning | 15, 17, 19 | 3 (5) |
| Quality improvement tracking | 16, 18, 19 | 3 (5) |
| Root cause analysis | 12, 17, 19 | 3 (5) |
| Staff education | 13, 17, 19 | 3 (5) |
| Financial resources | 11, 14 | 2 (3) |
| Implementation | 17, 18 | 2 (3) |
| Workflow | 14, 15 | 2 (3) |
| Staffing | 17 | 1 (1) |
| Total occurrences | 63 |
Barrier themes associated with higher 30-day skilled nursing facilities-to-hospital readmissions
| Barrier themes | Occurrences (by article number) | Sum (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Implementation | 12, 13, 15, 17, 19, 20 | 6 (17) |
| Quality improvement tracking | 12, 15, 16, 17, 19, 20 | 6 (17) |
| Staffing | 11, 12, 15, 17, 18 | 5 (14) |
| Specialized staff | 11, 15, 17, 20 | 4 (11) |
| Financial resources | 17, 18, 19 | 3 (9) |
| Leadership engagement | 12, 15, 17 | 3 (9) |
| Care paths | 13, 14 | 2 (6) |
| Collaborative case management | 15 | 1 (3) |
| Communication tools | 20 | 1 (3) |
| Medication reconciliation | 14 | 1 (3) |
| Patient transfer protocol | 15 | 1 (3) |
| Staff education | 13 | 1 (3) |
| Workflow | 11 | 1 (3) |
| Total occurrences | 35 |