Hospitalization of Nursing Home Residents: The Effects of States' Medicaid Payment and Bed‐Hold Policies
- 5 December 2006
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Health Services Research
- Vol. 42 (4) , 1651-1671
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-6773.2006.00670.x
Abstract
Objective. Hospitalizations of nursing home residents are costly and expose residents to iatrogenic disease and social and psychological harm. Economic constraints imposed by payers of care, predominantly Medicaid policies, are hypothesized to impact hospitalizations. Data Sources/Study Setting. Federally mandated resident assessments were merged with Medicare claims and eligibility files to determine hospitalizations and death within 150 days of baseline assessment. Nursing home and market characteristics were obtained from the Online Survey Certification and Reporting, and the Area Resource File, respectively. States' average daily Medicaid nursing home payments and bed‐hold policies were obtained independently. Study Design. Prospective cohort study of 570,614 older (≥65‐year‐old), non‐MCO (Medicare Managed Care), long‐stay (≥90 days) residents in 8,997 urban, freestanding nursing homes assessed between April and June 2000, using multilevel models to test the impact of state policies on hospitalizations controlling for resident, nursing home, and market characteristics. Principal Findings. Overall, 99,379 (17.4 percent) residents were hospitalized with rates varying from 8.4 percent in Utah to 24.9 percent in Louisiana. Higher Medicaid per diem was associated with lower odds of hospitalizations (5 percent lower for each $10 above average $103.5, confidence intervals [CI] 0.91–0.99). Hospitalization odds were higher by 36 percent in states with bed‐hold policies (CI: 1.12–1.63). Conclusions. State Medicaid bed‐hold policy and per‐diem payment have important implications for nursing home hospitalizations, which are predominantly financed by Medicare. This study emphasizes the importance of properly aligning state Medicaid and federal Medicare policies in regards to the subsidy of acute, maintenance, and preventive care in the nursing home setting.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- Discretionary Hospitalization of Nursing Home Residents With and Without Alzheimer’s DiseaseJournal of Aging and Health, 2005
- Physician and nurse staffing in nursing homes: The role and limitations of the Online Survey Certification and Reporting (OSCAR) systemJournal of the American Medical Directors Association, 2005
- Recent Trends In State Nursing Home Payment PoliciesHealth Affairs, 2004
- The Impact of the Prospective Payment System for Skilled Nursing Facilities on Therapy Service Provision: A Transaction Cost ApproachHealth Services Research, 2003
- Experts recommend minimum nurse staffing standards for nursing facilities in the United StatesThe Gerontologist, 2000
- Facility Characteristics Associated With Hospitalization of Nursing Home ResidentsMedical Care, 1999
- The effect of Medicaid reimbursement on quality of care in nursing homesJournal of Health Economics, 1996
- Functional and Residential Status Transitions Among Nursing Home ResidentsThe Journals of Gerontology: Series A, 1996
- Market Competition and the Quality of Nursing Home CareJournal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, 1994
- The Effects of Competition and Regulation on Hospital Bed Supply and the Reservation Quality of the HospitalThe Bell Journal of Economics, 1980