(Press-News.org) Differences in regional hospital readmission rates for heart failure are more closely tied to the availability of care and socioeconomics than to hospital performance or patients' degree of illness, according to research presented at the American Heart Association's Quality of Care & Outcomes Research Scientific Sessions 2012.
U.S. regional readmission rates for heart failure vary widely ― from 10 percent to 32 percent ― researchers found. Communities with higher rates were likely to have more physicians and hospital beds and their populations were likely to be poor, black and relatively sicker. People 65 and older are also readmitted more frequently.
To cut costs, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services plans to penalize hospitals with higher readmission rates related to heart failure, heart attack and pneumonia. Next year, hospitals with higher-than-average 30-day readmission rates will face reductions in Medicare payments.
But the penalties don't address the supply and societal influences that can increase readmission rates, said Karen E. Joynt, M.D., lead author of the study and an instructor at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School and the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, Mass.
"We have to find ways to help hospitals and communities address this problem together, as opposed to putting the burden on hospitals alone," said Joynt. "We need to think less about comparing hospitals to each other in terms of their performance and more about looking at improvement in hospitals and communities."
Researchers found:
Supply-side factors ― including availability of doctors and hospitals beds ― were the strongest predictors of differences in readmission rates, accounting for 17 percent.
Poverty and minority racial makeup was linked to 9 percent of the variation in readmission rates.
Hospital-performance quality accounted for 5 percent and patients' degree of illness 4 percent.
"To really address the readmissions issue, we need to think about this in terms of community and population health," Joynt said. "Focusing on community-level factors ― such as the supply and mix of physicians and targeting efforts towards poor and minority communities ― may be more fruitful approaches to reducing readmissions We need to think outside the walls of the hospital."
Researchers analyzed national billing records of more than 3,000 hospitals in 2008-09 for more than 1 million elderly Medicare patients with heart failure. Of the patients in the review, 55 percent were female, 11 percent were black and they had an average age of 81.
The observational analysis didn't include all potential influences, such as other illnesses, Joynt said.
###
Co-authors are E. John Orav, Ph.D., and Ashish K. Jha, M.D., M.P.H. Author disclosures are on the abstract.
The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, funded the study.
The American Heart Association's Target: Heart Failure is an initiative that provides healthcare professionals with content-rich resources and materials designed to help them advance heart failure awareness, prevention, treatment and recovery, with a focus on reducing hospital readmissions.
Statements and conclusions of study authors published in American Heart Association scientific meetings are solely those of the study authors and do not necessarily reflect the association's policy or position. The association makes no representation or guarantee as to their accuracy or reliability. The association receives funding primarily from individuals; foundations and corporations (including pharmaceutical, device manufacturers and other companies) also make donations and fund specific association programs and events. The association has strict policies to prevent these relationships from influencing the science content. Revenues from pharmaceutical and device corporations are available at www.heart.org/corporatefunding. END
A study conducted at Scripps Health has found that a novel new heart monitoring device helped emergency room patients avoid unnecessary follow-up care. Scripps Health electrophysiologist Steven Higgins, MD, presented findings of the study titled, "Prevalence of Arrhythmias in Emergency Department Patients Discharged Using a Novel Ambulatory Cardiac Monitor", today at the Heart Rhythm Society's 33rd Annual Scientific Sessions in Boston.
The study focused on the use of Zio® Patch, a single-use ambulatory cardiac monitor that looks similar to a 2- by 5-inch adhesive bandage ...
Growing Use of Credit Reports in Hiring Decisions
There is a growing trend among employers across the country to use credit reports to screen job applicants. While the practice is largely illegal in Maryland, the phenomenon is disturbing given the considerable difficulties already facing many of today's jobseekers.
More than ever before, according to USA Today, recruiters say employers are using credit reports to screen potential employees. While small business owners may approve of the strategy, folks who are out of work and down on their luck do not view the policy ...
Barcelona, Spain: Using a concentrated, highly targeted dose of radiation to the breast has equally good results as irradiating the whole area, with no adverse effects on survival and a much better cosmetic outcome, Hungarian researchers have found. Reporting the ten-year results of a randomised trial, Professor Csaba Polgár, MD, Director of the Centre for Radiotherapy, National Institute of Oncology, Budapest, will tell the World Congress of Brachytherapy [1 & 2] today (Friday) that he believes that accelerated partial breast irradiation (APBI) could be offered to many ...
AiNET, an innovator in data centers, cloud services and fiber networks, announced today that its new MicroMetering service will provide all data center colocation customers with cost-savings, power redundancy and better scalability. Frequently data center customers are charged based on the capacity of their electrical service. Metered power has advantages over capacity based offerings and cost savings up to 70%. Until now, metered power was only available for the largest colocation and wholesale customers.
AiNET MicroMetering is available now at its Laurel, Maryland ...
Barcelona, Spain: New research showing that almost half of 13,000 patients with head and neck cancers had other health-related problems at the same time is one of the presentations in a special session at the 31st conference of the European Society for Radiotherapy and Oncology (ESTRO 31) [1] today (Friday). The session will highlight the effect of the demographic time bomb caused by an increasingly ageing population.
Dr Charlotte Rotbøl Bøje, from the Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus, Denmark, will tell the conference that analysis of co-morbidities – other medical ...
For the fourth consecutive year, S&A Cherokee has won multiple InSpire Awards from the North Carolina Chapter of the Public Relations Society of America (NCPRSA). NCPRSA launched the awards program in 2009 to honor the region's best efforts in public relations and communications.
S&A Cherokee received five Bronze InSpire Awards, recognizing tactics or components of campaigns, and one Silver InSpire Award, recognizing entire campaigns. Four of the company's winning entries also received Best in Category designation.
Bronze Award of Excellence and Best in Category, ...
The medical tourism guide Novasans has today launched a revamped Home Page to it's popular online medical travel directory and informational portal.
In its quest to bring affordable healthcare and surgery options closer to patients from across the world, Novasans has revised and upgraded its home page, to create a more user-friendly interface and an easier search tool. The new home page is divided into three areas;
1. Explanation to Novasans' features and services
2. Search Functionality to find a hospital, clinic or wellness center across the world, catering to ...
CHICAGO – A new electronic medical record tool that tallies patients' previous radiation exposure from CT scans helps reduce potentially unnecessary use of the tests among emergency room patients with abdominal pain, according to a study from researchers at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania that will be presented today at the annual meeting of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. The new study shows that when the tool is in use, patients are 10 percent less likely to undergo a CT scan, without increasing the number of patients who ...
Boomtext announces that it has adopted a new name - Mobivity - and will serve its clients even better. This new brand will hereafter accompany the firm's new product and service launches, as well as give a hand in providing value added services for its clients and increase their customer base by providing extremely intuitive and self-servicing mobile messaging platform.
Mobivity began as BoomText in 2007. Today, it is a renowned name in mobile marketing with years of experience in providing cost effective SMS marketing solutions. The company caters to a large number ...
CHICAGO -- Black cardiac arrest victims who are stricken outside hospitals are less likely to receive bystander CPR and defibrillation on the scene than white patients, according to research that will be presented by a research team from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania today at the annual meeting of Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. The researchers also found that black patients' hearts were much less likely to have been restarted by the time they arrived at the hospital – a key indicator for whether cardiac arrest victims ultimately ...