Better Hospital Discharges = Lower Healthcare Costs?
[Ed. Note: We are pleased to welcome Jae W. Joo to HRW. Jae is a third year student at Seton Hall Law. He graduated from Rutgers College in 2006 with a B.A. in Psychology and a minor in Philosophy. In 2009, he interned for the Honorable Denise A. Cobham in the Superior Court of New Jersey. Currently, he is a summer intern at the New Jersey Attorney General's Tobacco and Securities Litigation Section, and also a research assistant for the Healthcare Compliance Certification Program at Seton Hall Law.]
With healthcare reform fresh out of the congressional oven, many changes are taking place in the field of healthcare and a myriad of new challenges will undoubtedly arise. However, one of the perpetual challenges in the midst of all these changes has been the substantial amount of money needed to fund Medicare. The Patient Protection Affordable Care Act is laden with economically efficient methods and plans to reduce costs. However, as Lesley Alderman suggests in her NY Times article, a drastic cost saving measure may be implemented with a simple change in hospital procedure.
According to the article,
[In] a study published last year in The New England Journal of Medicine, one in five Medicare patients returns to the hospital within 30 days of being discharged. The problem is an expensive one: in 2004 these readmissions cost Medicare $17.4 billion dollars, the researchers also found.
As the study shows, readmission within 30 days of discharge has been costly and remains a substantial contributing source to the Medicare deficit. However, discharge procedures rarely get the same level of attention as admission procedures to a hospital.
At discharge, the assumption is that the patient is better and all will be fine, said Dr. Eric A. Coleman, a geriatrician and professor of medicine at the University of Colorado Denver. But many patients, especially older ones, leave the hospital with a host of issues to manage. They may have additional medications to take, new symptoms to monitor and follow up appointments to keep, all of which require focused attention at a time when patients may not be at their sharpest.
What’s more, while insurers will pay for limited hospital stays, there’s no financial incentive for hospitals to insure that patients get and stay out. ‘A hospital may actually be financially rewarded for mishandled discharge,’ said Dr. Williams, chief of hospital medicine at Northwestern University. ‘If the patient is readmitted, they get paid again.’
While there may be a general lack of concern or awareness to improve conditions of patient discharge, Alderman’s article mentions some initiatives that have been taken to improve the discharge process. Care Transition Intervention is a hospital-based program that helps reduce readmissions by coaching older adults on how to manage their health and take better care. Project Boost provides hospitals guidelines to help standardize and enhance the discharge process. Federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid has a program to improve hospital hand-offs for high risk patients and has also been developing a program to incentivize hospitals to lower their readmission rates.
Whether or not hospitals decide to implement new discharge protocols and procedures, individual patients can help alleviate the financial burdens placed on the system by taking an active role in managing their health. Alderman’s article points out a few tips to follow if a hospital does not have an up to date discharge procedure in place. Following these simple tips can, it seems, make a big difference.




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