A recent study by Brigham &
Women’s Hospital published in the British Medical Journal looked at
patients readmitted within 30 days for possibly avoidable causes. The
researchers found that infection and heart failure accounted for 21 to 34
percent of the total readmissions. They concluded that care after hospital discharge
should focus not only on the primary diagnosis, but also on related
complications.
What are some of the ways we can save Connecticut’s
healthcare delivery system money, and improve outcomes, by preventing patients
from being re-admitted to the hospital after their surgery or treatment? How
does home health care enter into the equation?
For answers, we turned to Barbara Katz, Director of Clinical Program Development at VNA Community Healthcare, which serves 34 Connecticut cities and towns from offices in Hamden
and Guilford. As recipient of the Connecticut Association for Healthcare at
Home’s 2013 Judith A. Hriceniak Award for Excellence in Nursing Leadership,
Barbara leverages her nursing background and strong business acumen to support
clinicians and home health care professionals as they improve hospital-to-home
care transitions.
Q: Why is reducing hospital readmissions
critical to improving the quality of care and outcomes for patients?
A:
Readmissions are quite expensive and are contributing to growing and
unsustainable medical costs. Cardiologist Harlan M. Krumholz, MD, director of
the Yale-New Haven Hospital Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation (CORE)
and director of the Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program at Yale has
researched the after-effects of people’s admission to hospitals.
While Dr. Krumholz
studied first-time admissions, we also know that re-admissions expose people to
the same stressors: Patients can become physically deconditioned, losing the
strength they need to perform daily activities. Elderly patients can become
delirious. Medications can get changed or mixed up.
Q: What does the
Affordable Care Act (ACA) ask hospitals and home health agencies to do to avoid
readmissions?
A: First and
foremost, the ACA imposes severe financial penalties on hospitals for
readmissions. This is the driver of much of the readmission reduction work
being done. In each state, Medicare Quality Improvement Organizations have been
set up to reduce readmissions. Here in Connecticut, Qualidigm
is working collaboratively with hospitals and post-acute healthcare providers
to reduce readmissions. A number of Medicare innovation grants are focused on
preventing readmissions. Yale New Haven hospital has a grant for a care
transitions program called Co-Starr that was funded in this way.
The ACA is also providing funds to test new models of
financing such as post-acute bundling of payments. This is based on the theory
that giving post-acute health care providers and hospitals one payment will
induce them to work together more effectively, which will lower costs. If Medicare
forces everyone to adopt value-based purchasing and pay-for-performance models,
that will also help reduce re-admissions.
Q: How have home
health agencies always sought to reduce hospital readmissions?
A: Home health
care nurses have always taught patients self-care skills. We recommend home
modifications to reduce falls and injuries that reduce hospitalization. We act
as the patient’s advocate with the medical care system.
We help patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disorder (COPD)
learn how to breathe better. We teach heart patients how to monitor and check
their weight. These measures are just two examples of how we help keep our
patients from being re-admitted to the hospital.
Physical and occupational therapy provided in the home,
including customized exercise programs to help patients function at their
optimal level, reduces falls and helps reduce unnecessary hospital
re-admissions. Occupational therapy, which is often overlooked, has played a
vital role in helping patients improve their movement to more safely perform daily
living activities.
Q: What are hospitals
doing now to reduce readmissions?
A: Interdisciplinary
teamwork is becoming an integral part of the hospital-to-home care continuum.
We’re beginning to remove the silos through frequent communication.
Our agency belongs to a multi-disciplinary care transitions group at
Yale New Haven Hospital. We discuss how to communicate across settings and what
each entity in the continuum needs to know to avoid future readmissions. We
also work together to put in place best practices and offer education to our
patients.
There’s now a lot better transfer of information between hospitals and
home health care entities. For example, Yale New Haven Hospital’s EPIC data
capture system provides data to patients, their families and home care
providers during the first 48 hours after the patient’s discharge. Patients can
also get access to the system to monitor their admissions, which also serves as
a readmission reduction tool.
Hospitals are measuring readmissions and feeding back the data
to the home care agencies they refer to. At some point in the future, referrals
may be dependent on results, i.e. lower readmissions.
Q: How are home health
care agencies using clinical best practices to reduce readmissions?
A: Home health care
best practices include things like front-loading home visits, ensuring that
patients see their physician within a week of discharge to adjust medications and modify the
treatment plan if that’s needed, medication reconciliation. We use
telemonitoring to help patients learn self-management. Telemedicine also
provides an early warning system that helps us identify patients who are physically
decompensating due to their heart condition.
Some agencies, such as ours, are training staff in patient
engagement, health literacy and motivational interviewing to deal with
patients’ adherence to their care plan, which is a major problem in
readmissions.
Home health care agencies are also breaking down communications
barriers with other post-acute providers with strategies such as pre-discharge
liaison visits, regular readmission case reviews and nursing home diversion
strategies. Some agencies are using APRNs to see the sickest and most high-risk
patients after their discharge from the hospital.
Q: What still needs
to be done to reduce hospital readmissions?
A: Primary care
doctors — the one key stakeholder group that is not yet active in hospital
readmission collaboratives, but can make all the difference in avoiding
readmissions —need to become much more engaged.
Meanwhile, home health care agencies need to better
understand the factors that are driving readmissions and the ways to address
them. Home health care agencies must become much more sophisticated in the use
of data, the tools and the techniques of process improvement. This usually
means changing traditional work processes, and, in some cases, work structures,
such as changing from a geographic model to a specialty model of service.
Home health care agencies must strengthen their liaisons with other
post-acute healthcare providers, including skilled nursing and assisted living
facilities. Our VNA does liaison visits to the skilled clinical facilities in
our area. We engage with the social worker in each facility. We help the patient’s
family understand what’s realistic, what can be done in the home and what can’t.
We do regular re-admission case reviews: what worked, what didn’t what could be
done better.
Finally, we health care professionals need to shift our brains to
think of ourselves as partners with patients, not directors of their care. We must learn to use health literacy, motivational
interviewing, health coaching and other sophisticated techniques to engage
patients in their self-care. This interdisciplinary teamwork needs to become an
integral part of how we work with patients who have complex needs.