Jiyoun Song1, Maryam Zolnoori2, Margaret V McDonald3, Yolanda Barrón3, Kenrick Cato4, Paulina Sockolow5, Sridevi Sridharan3, Nicole Onorato3, Kathryn H Bowles6, Maxim Topaz7. 1. Columbia University School of Nursing, New York City, NY, USA. Electronic address: js4753@cumc.columbia.edu. 2. Columbia University School of Nursing, New York City, NY, USA. 3. Center for Home Care Policy & Research, Visiting Nurse Service of New York, New York, NY, USA. 4. Columbia University School of Nursing, New York City, NY, USA; Emergency Medicine, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, NY, USA. 5. Department of Health Systems and Sciences Research, Drexel University College of Nursing and Health Professions, Philadelphia, PA, USA. 6. Center for Home Care Policy & Research, Visiting Nurse Service of New York, New York, NY, USA; Department of Biobehavioral Health Sciences, University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, Philadelphia, PA, USA. 7. Columbia University School of Nursing, New York City, NY, USA; Center for Home Care Policy & Research, Visiting Nurse Service of New York, New York, NY, USA; Data Science Institute, Columbia University, New York City, NY, USA.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Home health care patients have critical needs requiring timely care following hospital discharge. Although Medicare requires timely start-of-care nursing visits, a significant portion of home health care patients wait longer than 2 days for the first visit. No previous studies investigated the pattern of start-of-care visits or factors associated with their timing. This study's purpose was to examine variation in timing of start-of-care visits and characterize patients with visits later than 2 days postdischarge. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: Patients admitted to a large, Northeastern US, urban home health care organization during 2019. The study included 48,497 home care episodes for 45,390 individual patients. MEASUREMENT: We calculated time to start of care from hospital discharge for 2 patient groups: those seen within 2 days vs those seen >2 days postdischarge. We examined patient factors, hospital discharge factors, and timing of start of care using multivariate logistic regression. RESULTS: Of 48,497 episodes, 16,251 (33.5%) had a start-of-care nursing visit >2 days after discharge. Increased odds of this time frame were associated with being black or Hispanic and having solely Medicaid insurance. Odds were highest for patients discharged on Fridays, Saturdays, and Mondays. Factors associated with visits within 2 days included surgical wound presence, urinary catheter, pain, 5 or more medications, and intravenous or infusion therapies at home. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: Findings provide the first publication of clinical and demographic characteristics associated with home health care start-of-care timing and its variation. Further examination is needed, and adjustments to staff scheduling and improved information transfer are 2 suggested interventions to decrease variation.
OBJECTIVES: Home health care patients have critical needs requiring timely care following hospital discharge. Although Medicare requires timely start-of-care nursing visits, a significant portion of home health care patients wait longer than 2 days for the first visit. No previous studies investigated the pattern of start-of-care visits or factors associated with their timing. This study's purpose was to examine variation in timing of start-of-care visits and characterize patients with visits later than 2 days postdischarge. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: Patients admitted to a large, Northeastern US, urban home health care organization during 2019. The study included 48,497 home care episodes for 45,390 individual patients. MEASUREMENT: We calculated time to start of care from hospital discharge for 2 patient groups: those seen within 2 days vs those seen >2 days postdischarge. We examined patient factors, hospital discharge factors, and timing of start of care using multivariate logistic regression. RESULTS: Of 48,497 episodes, 16,251 (33.5%) had a start-of-care nursing visit >2 days after discharge. Increased odds of this time frame were associated with being black or Hispanic and having solely Medicaid insurance. Odds were highest for patients discharged on Fridays, Saturdays, and Mondays. Factors associated with visits within 2 days included surgical wound presence, urinary catheter, pain, 5 or more medications, and intravenous or infusion therapies at home. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: Findings provide the first publication of clinical and demographic characteristics associated with home health care start-of-care timing and its variation. Further examination is needed, and adjustments to staff scheduling and improved information transfer are 2 suggested interventions to decrease variation.
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