Recent National Trends in Readmission Rates After Heart Failure Hospitalization
Top Cited Papers
- 1 January 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation: Heart Failure
- Vol. 3 (1) , 97-103
- https://doi.org/10.1161/circheartfailure.109.885210
Abstract
Background— In July 2009, Medicare began publicly reporting hospitals’ risk-standardized 30-day all-cause readmission rates (RSRRs) among fee-for-service beneficiaries discharged after hospitalization for heart failure from all the US acute care nonfederal hospitals. No recent national trends in RSRRs have been reported, and it is not known whether hospital-specific performance is improving or variation in performance is decreasing. Methods and Results— We used 2004–2006 Medicare administrative data to identify all fee-for-service beneficiaries admitted to a US acute care hospital for heart failure and discharged alive. We estimated mean annual RSRRs, a National Quality Forum-endorsed metric for quality, using 2-level hierarchical models that accounted for age, sex, and multiple comorbidities; variation in quality was estimated by the SD of the RSRRs. There were 570 996 distinct hospitalizations for heart failure in which the patient was discharged alive in 4728 hospitals in 2004, 544 550 in 4694 hospitals in 2005, and 501 234 in 4674 hospitals in 2006. Unadjusted 30-day all-cause readmission rates were virtually identical over this period: 23.0% in 2004, 23.3% in 2005, and 22.9% in 2006. The mean and SD of RSRRs were also similar: mean (SD) of 23.7% (1.3) in 2004, 23.9% (1.4) in 2005, and 23.8% (1.4) in 2006, suggesting similar hospital variation throughout the study period. Conclusions— National mean and RSRR distributions among Medicare beneficiaries discharged after hospitalization for heart failure have not changed in recent years, indicating that there was neither improvement in hospital readmission rates nor in hospital variations in rates over this time period.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Rehospitalizations among Patients in the Medicare Fee-for-Service ProgramNew England Journal of Medicine, 2009
- Standards for Measures Used for Public Reporting of Efficiency in Health CareCirculation, 2008
- An Administrative Claims Measure Suitable for Profiling Hospital Performance on the Basis of 30-Day All-Cause Readmission Rates Among Patients With Heart FailureCirculation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes, 2008
- Isolation of Health Services Research from Practice and Policy: The Example of Chronic Heart Failure ManagementJournal of the American Geriatrics Society, 2006
- Hospital Performance Reports: Impact On Quality, Market Share, And ReputationHealth Affairs, 2005
- A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Studies Comparing Readmission Rates and Mortality Rates in Patients With Heart FailureArchives of internal medicine (1960), 2004
- Comprehensive Discharge Planning With Postdischarge Support for Older Patients With Congestive Heart FailureJAMA, 2004
- What Is Driving Hospitals’ Patient-Safety Efforts?Health Affairs, 2004
- Sample size considerations in observational health care quality studiesStatistics in Medicine, 2002
- A Medication Discharge Planning ProgramClinical Nursing Research, 1993