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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090401/ap_on_he_me/med_hospital_readmissions;_ylt=A\

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1 in 5 Medicare patients readmitted within month

By STEPHANIE NANO, Associated Press Writer Nano, Associated Press

Writer – 29 mins ago

NEW YORK – One in five Medicare patients end up back in the hospital within a

month of discharge, a large study found, and that practice costs billions of

dollars a year. The findings suggest patients aren't told enough about how to

take care of themselves and stay healthy before they go home, the researchers

said. A few simple things — like making a doctor's appointment for departing

patients — can help, they said.

The study found that a surprising half of the non-surgery patients who returned

within a month hadn't even seen a doctor between hospital stays.

" Hospitals put more effort into the admission process than they do into the

discharge process, " said Dr. , one of the study's authors from the

University of Colorado in Denver.

, who runs a program to improve " hand-offs " between health care systems,

said patients often have a honeymoon notion about how things will be once

they're home. Then when they become confused about how to take their medicine or

run into other problems, they head back to the hospital because they don't know

where to turn, he said.

The issue of hospital readmissions and their cost has come under scrutiny in

recent years. And it's getting attention now because President Barack Obama's

budget calls for reducing spending on Medicare readmissions to pay for health

care reform.

For their study, reported in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine, the

researchers looked at Medicare records from late 2003 through 2004. They found

that about 20 percent of 11.9 million patients were readmitted to the hospital

within a month of discharge; about a third were back in the hospital within

three months.

About half of the patients hospitalized for ailments didn't see a doctor before

they landed back in the hospital within a month.

Patients with heart failure and pneumonia had the most readmissions overall;

among surgical procedures, heart stents and major hip and knee surgery had the

highest returns.

About 10 percent of all readmissions were probably planned, such as putting in a

stent, the researchers said. They estimated that the cost of unplanned return

visits in 2004 was $17.4 billion.

" It's a big hunk of money and it's a big hunk of misery, " said another study

author, Dr. Jencks, an independent consultant who worked for the Centers

for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Besides making follow-up doctor appointments, Jencks said hospitals should give

patients a list of all their medications, explain what to do at home and where

to call if they run into problems. He said the hospitals should also call the

patient within two days and make sure that the patient's doctor knows they were

in the hospital.

He said the goal is to keep patients from getting really sick again, not to keep

them out of the hospital if they do.

The differences in readmission rates among states suggests that improvements can

be made, he said. Iowa had the lowest rate with 13 percent, while Washington,

D.C., had the highest at 23 percent.

Dr. Jack at Boston Medical Center tells the story of a patient who didn't

understand that the blood pressure medicine that the hospital told her to take

was the same as the one she had at home — just with different names. She took

both and returned to the hospital with kidney failure. Jack and his colleagues

tested a new checklist that nurses used when they sent patients home. The

patients who used the checklist had 30 percent fewer visits to the emergency

room or return hospital stays over the next month, compared to patients who

didn't use it, they found.

" There are not too many things that improve health and save money, " said Jack,

who was not involved in the new research.

In 2007, a panel that advises Congress on Medicare suggested ways to cut

hospital readmissions. One recommendation was to change how Medicare pays

hospitals and to cut payments to those with high rates — an approach included in

Obama's budget proposal.

Currently, hospitals get the same payment for each hospital stay and critics say

there's no incentive to reduce readmissions.

___

On the Net:

New England Journal: http://www.nejm.org

Care Transitions: http://www.caretransitions.org/

Project Red: http://www.bu.edu/fammed/projectred

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