Brian M Curtin1, Robert D Russell2, Susan M Odum3. 1. OrthoCarolina Hip and Knee Center, Charlotte, North Carolina. 2. W.B. Carrell Memorial Clinic, Dallas, Texas. 3. OrthoCarolina Research Institute, Charlotte, North Carolina.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As early implementors of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Bundled Payments for Care Improvement (BPCI) initiative, our private practice sought to compare our readmission rates, post-acute care utilization, and length of stay for the first year under BPCI compared to baseline data. METHODS: We used CMS data to compare total expenditures of all diagnosis-related groups (DRGs). Medicare patients who underwent orthopedic surgery between 2009 and 2012 were defined as non-BPCI (n = 8415) and were compared to Medicare BPCI patients (n = 4757) who had surgery in 2015. Ninety-day post-acute events including inpatient rehabilitation facility or subacute nursing facility admission, home health (HH), and readmissions were analyzed. RESULTS: The median expenditure for non-BPCI patients was $22,193 compared to $19,476 for BPCI patients (P < .001). Median post-acute care spend was $6861 for non-BPCI and $5360 for BPCI patients (P < .001). Compared to non-BPCI patients, BPCI patients had a lower rate of subacute nursing facility admissions (non-BPCI 43% vs 37% BPCI; P < .001), inpatient rehabilitation facility admissions (non-BPCI 3% vs 4% BPCI; P = .005), HH (non-BPCI 79% vs 73% BPCI; P < .001), and readmissions (non-BPCI 12% vs 10% BPCI; P = .02). Changes in length of stay for post-acute care were only significant for HH with BPCI patients using a median 12 days and non-BPCI using 24 days. CONCLUSION: The objective of BPCI was to improve healthcare value. Through substantial efforts both financially and utilization of human resources to contain costs with clinical practice guidelines, patient navigators, and a BPCI management team, the expenditures for CMS were significantly lower for BPCI patients.
BACKGROUND: As early implementors of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Bundled Payments for Care Improvement (BPCI) initiative, our private practice sought to compare our readmission rates, post-acute care utilization, and length of stay for the first year under BPCI compared to baseline data. METHODS: We used CMS data to compare total expenditures of all diagnosis-related groups (DRGs). Medicare patients who underwent orthopedic surgery between 2009 and 2012 were defined as non-BPCI (n = 8415) and were compared to Medicare BPCIpatients (n = 4757) who had surgery in 2015. Ninety-day post-acute events including inpatient rehabilitation facility or subacute nursing facility admission, home health (HH), and readmissions were analyzed. RESULTS: The median expenditure for non-BPCIpatients was $22,193 compared to $19,476 for BPCIpatients (P < .001). Median post-acute care spend was $6861 for non-BPCI and $5360 for BPCIpatients (P < .001). Compared to non-BPCIpatients, BPCIpatients had a lower rate of subacute nursing facility admissions (non-BPCI 43% vs 37% BPCI; P < .001), inpatient rehabilitation facility admissions (non-BPCI 3% vs 4% BPCI; P = .005), HH (non-BPCI 79% vs 73% BPCI; P < .001), and readmissions (non-BPCI 12% vs 10% BPCI; P = .02). Changes in length of stay for post-acute care were only significant for HH with BPCIpatients using a median 12 days and non-BPCI using 24 days. CONCLUSION: The objective of BPCI was to improve healthcare value. Through substantial efforts both financially and utilization of human resources to contain costs with clinical practice guidelines, patient navigators, and a BPCI management team, the expenditures for CMS were significantly lower for BPCIpatients.
Authors: Cheryl K Zogg; Taylor D Ottesen; Kareem J Kebaish; Anoop Galivanche; Shilpa Murthy; Navin R Changoor; Donald L Zogg; Timothy M Pawlik; Adil H Haider Journal: J Gastrointest Surg Date: 2018-06-26 Impact factor: 3.452
Authors: Alexander M Lieber; Anthony J Boniello; Yehuda E Kerbel; Philip Petrucelli; Venkat Kavuri; Andre Jakoi; Amrit S Khalsa Journal: Global Spine J Date: 2019-09-12
Authors: Thomas C Hydrick; Nicolas Rubel; Sean Renfree; Nina Lara; Justin L Makovicka; Varun Arvind; Michael Chang; Andrew Chung Journal: Global Spine J Date: 2019-11-10
Authors: William S Murphy; Ahmed Siddiqi; Tony Cheng; Ben Lin; David Terry; Carl T Talmo; Stephen B Murphy Journal: Clin Orthop Relat Res Date: 2019-02 Impact factor: 4.176
Authors: Cesar D Lopez; Venkat Boddapati; Alexander L Neuwirth; Roshan P Shah; H John Cooper; Jeffrey A Geller Journal: Arthroplast Today Date: 2020-06-23
Authors: Majd Marrache; Andrew B Harris; Varun Puvanesarajah; Micheal Raad; Hamid Hassanzadeh; Lee H Riley; Richard L Skolasky; Mark Bicket; Amit Jain Journal: Global Spine J Date: 2020-01-14