PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Skating to the puck or avoiding the penalty box in health care?

2014-03-12
(Press-News.org) LEBANON, NH (March 12, 2014) – In a Viewpoint published in the March issue of JAMA, Researcher Jeremiah Brown of The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy & Clinical Practice and colleagues, Hal Sox and David Goodman, question whether the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services' use of financial penalties is the right tack for changing the behavior of hospitals.

The researchers examine the pros and cons of the hospital readmissions reduction policy in the Affordable Care Act as an example of similar CMS initiatives.

"Using financial incentives to change practice is a tried-and-true CMS strategy," the researchers said. And the penalties worked – more than half of U.S. hospitals reduced their early readmission penalty in less than a year.

There may be a downside, however. They say hospitals have not taken the aphorism of hockey great Wayne Gretsky to heart in skating "to where the puck is going to be, not where it has been." Instead hospitals have adopted the strategy to be "more focused on playing to the puck to avoid financial penalties."

In reallocating resources to avoid a specific penalty, hospitals and CMS may neglect "the more important goal" of improved population health and high value health care, which both CMS and accountable care organizations are trying to promote.

The larger question may be, the researchers posit, whether early readmissions is part of a more general problem of health care that is in excess of and not well matched to the patient's needs.

Important causes of readmissions to address are: Errors in hospital and transition care; Low threshold for admission and readmission; Premature discharge because of pressure to vacate hospital beds.

All of these causes are important to scrutinize, the authors say, and recommend three suggestions, using the early readmissions penalties as an example of targeting the performance of one medical care service that can change a behavior affecting the performance of other services.

First, CMS should encourage hospitals to invest in broader goals and reward success. Broadening the scope of the readmissions program to include admissions would be a small step in the right direction, they said, because many of the behaviors that stem from unnecessary admissions also lead to readmissions.

Second, CMS should study possible adverse consequences of lost revenue from penalties or averted readmissions. And hospitals should monitor unintended consequences from targeted interventions, and ensure that quality improvement efforts in patient care are not neglected.

The authors give CMS credit for studying one area of potential unintended consequences in penalizing high 30-day readmission rates – high mortality. It is measuring both use of resources and survival for acute myocardial infarction, heart failure and pneumonia. In FY2014, CMS will hold a hospital accountable if its 30-day readmission rate declines while its 30-day mortality increases.

Third, CMS should move beyond penalties for specific outcomes to create broader incentives to improve overall hospital performance. But, the authors said, because hospitals respond to the threat of penalties, CMS may be tempted to expand the program.

"Alternately, CMS could use its power to direct hospitals toward the end goal of improved population health," the authors said. They suggested the 33 measures of accountable care organizations as a good place to start "to move the puck toward the goal of healthy populations."

INFORMATION: To view the Perspective in JAMA, visit http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=1840242.

Jeremiah Brown is an Assistant Professor at TDI and the departments of Medicine and Community & Family Medicine whose research focuses on quality improvement and quality metrics in health care.

The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy & Clinical Practice was founded in 1988 by Dr. John E. Wennberg as the Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences (CECS). Among its 25 years of accomplishments, it has established a new discipline and educational focus in the Evaluative Clinical Sciences, introduced and advanced the concept of shared decision-making for patients, demonstrated unwarranted variation in the practice and outcomes of medical treatment, developed the first comprehensive examination of US health care variations (The Dartmouth Atlas), and has shown that more health care is not necessarily better.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

The immune system's redesigned role in fighting cancerous tumors

2014-03-12
LOS ANGELES (March 11, 2014) – Researchers in the Cedars-Sinai Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute eradicated solid tumors in laboratory mice using a novel combination of two targeted agents. These two synergistic therapies stimulate an immune response, ultimately allowing solid tumors to act as their own cancer-fighting vaccine. The study's findings, published in the journal Cancer Research, are the first to use these combined agents as an immune stimulator and may have the potential to kill cancerous cells in solid tumors, including some of the most aggressive ...

Fruit flies help uncover tumor-preventing protein complex

Fruit flies help uncover tumor-preventing protein complex
2014-03-12
A team of researchers from Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School have discovered a protein complex that disrupts the process known as dedifferentiation (1), known to promote tumor development. Dedifferentiation (reversion) is a process that leads progenitor (2) or mature cells to become 'ectopic neural stem cells' which causes tumors. By detecting this protein complex, Duke-NUS researchers have shed light on a process that inhibits tumor development and gives hope for the discovery of therapies and treatments that target tumor prevention through this pathway. Researchers ...

Researchers slow pancreatic cancer growth by blocking key enzyme

2014-03-12
A research team from Imperial College London has shown that blocking the function of an enzyme known as Hhat slows the growth and spread of pancreatic cancer, by preventing a protein called Hedgehog from stimulating nearby normal cells to help the cancer. The study, funded by the UK research charity Pancreatic Cancer Research Fund, examined the role of Hedgehog, whose usual job is to send signals to cells in embryos to divide and grow into the correct body parts. But while Hedgehog usually switches off when the embryo is formed, in many cancers, including pancreatic, ...

Superior visual thinking may be key to independence for high schoolers with autism

Superior visual thinking may be key to independence for high schoolers with autism
2014-03-12
Researchers at UNC's Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute (FPG) and UNC's School of Education report that teaching independence to adolescents with autism can provide a crucial boost to their chances for success after high school. "We explored many factors that contribute to the poor outcomes people with autism often experience," said Kara Hume, co-principal investigator of FPG's Center on Secondary Education for Students with Autism Spectrum Disorders (CSESA). "It's clear that teaching independence to students with autism should be a central focus of their ...

Chronic pain research explores the brain

2014-03-12
New insights into how the human brain responds to chronic pain could eventually lead to improved treatments for patients, according to University of Adelaide researchers. Neuroplasticity is the term used to describe the brain's ability to change structurally and functionally with experience and use. "Neuroplasticity underlies our learning and memory, making it vital during early childhood development and important for continuous learning throughout life," says Dr Ann-Maree Vallence, a Postdoctoral Fellow in the University of Adelaide's Robinson Institute. "The mechanisms ...

Surface characteristics influence cellular growth on semiconductor material

Surface characteristics influence cellular growth on semiconductor material
2014-03-12
Changing the texture and surface characteristics of a semiconductor material at the nanoscale can influence the way that neural cells grow on the material. The finding stems from a study performed by researchers at North Carolina State University, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Purdue University, and may have utility for developing future neural implants. "We wanted to know how a material's texture and structure can influence cell adhesion and differentiation," says Lauren Bain, lead author of a paper describing the work and a Ph.D. student in ...

Alpha-synuclein effects on dopaminergic neurons: Protection or damage?

Alpha-synuclein effects on dopaminergic neurons: Protection or damage?
2014-03-12
Alpha-synuclein is a principal component of Lewy bodies and Lewy neurites, which are pathologic hall-marks of Parkinson's disease. Alpha-synuclein is generally considered to play a role in synaptic activity, although its function remains largely unknown. Accumulative evidence has been shown that aggregated extracellular alpha-synuclein fibrils can be internalized in the cells and enhance the intracellular formation of protein inclusions, leading to cell death. Conversely, there is emerging evidence suggesting that alpha-synuclein has also neuroprotective effects. In one ...

PD-L1: A potential treatment target for multiple sclerosis

PD-L1: A potential treatment target for multiple sclerosis
2014-03-12
Experimental allergic encephalomyelitis is a mouse model of human multiple sclerosis with similar pathology and pathogenesis. Th1 cells play an important role in the pathogenesis of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis. Therefore, Qun Xue, Fanli Dong and co-workers from the First Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University in China speculated that programmed cell death 1 ligand 1 (PD-L1) plays an important role in the pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis. A recent study by these researchers published in the Neural Regeneration Research (Vol. 8, No. 35, 2013) found that the ...

Quantum physics secures new cryptography scheme

Quantum physics secures new cryptography scheme
2014-03-12
The way we secure digital transactions could soon change. An international team has demonstrated a form of quantum cryptography that can protect people doing business with others they may not know or trust – a situation encountered often on the internet and in everyday life, for example at a bank's ATM. "Having quantum cryptography to hand is a realistic prospect, I think. I expect that quantum technologies will gradually become integrated with existing devices such as smartphones, allowing us to do things like identify ourselves securely or generate encryption keys," ...

Peripheral nerve regeneration using a nerve growth factor-containing fibrin glue membrane

2014-03-12
Complete regeneration is usually very difficult following peripheral nerve damage, though microsurgical techniques have vastly increased the success rate of surgery to repair the injured nerve. This occurs possibly because of a lack of neurotrophic factors and extracellular matrix in the injured region, which results in a microenvironment that is not optimal for peripheral nerve regeneration. Nerve growth factor (NGF) was the first neurotrophic factor identified in a class of molecules responsible for neuronal survival and differentiation. Consequently, many techniques, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Over 1.2 million medical device side-effect reports not submitted within legal timeframe

An easy-to-apply gel prevents abdominal adhesions in animals in Stanford Medicine study

A path to safer, high-energy electric vehicle batteries

openRxiv launch to sustain and expand preprint sharing in life and health sciences

“Overlooked” scrub typhus may affect 1 in 10 in rural India, and be a leading cause of hospitalisations for fever

Vocal changes in birds may predict age-related disorders in people, study finds

Spotiphy integrative analysis tool turns spatial RNA sequencing into imager

Dynamic acoustics of hand clapping, elucidated

AAN, AES and EFA issue position statement on seizures and driving safety

Do brain changes remain after recovery from concussion?

Want to climb the leadership ladder? Try debate training

No countries on track to meet all 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals

Robotics and spinal stimulation restore movement in paralysis

China discovers terrestrial "Life oasis" from end-Permian mass extinction period

Poor sleep may fuel conspiracy beliefs, according to new research

Adolescent boys who experience violence have up to 8 times the odds of perpetrating physical and sexual intimate partner violence that same day, per South African study collecting real-time data over

Critically endangered hawksbill turtles migrate up to 1,000km from nesting to foraging grounds in the Western Caribbean, riding with and against ocean currents to congregate in popular feeding hotspot

UAlbany researchers unlock new capabilities in DNA nanostructure self-assembly

PM2.5 exposure may be associated with increased skin redness in Taiwanese adults, suggesting that air pollution may contribute to skin health issues

BD² announces four new sites to join landmark bipolar disorder research and clinical care network

Digital Exclusion Increases Risk of Depression Among Older Adults Across 24 Countries

Quantum annealing processors achieve computational advantage in simulating problems on quantum entanglement

How UV radiation triggers a cellular rescue mission

Hepatic stellate cells control liver function and regeneration

The secret DNA circles fueling pancreatic cancer’s aggression

2D metals: Chinese scientists achieve breakthrough in atomic manufacturing

Cause of post-COVID inflammatory shock in children identified

QIA researchers create first Operating System for Quantum Networks

How the brain uses ‘building blocks’ to navigate social interactions

Want to preserve biodiversity? Go big, U-M researchers say

[Press-News.org] Skating to the puck or avoiding the penalty box in health care?