«High rate of patient factors linked to
hospital readmissions following general surgery.»
Not exact matches
Still, experts have argued that
hospitals could go a long way toward reducing
readmissions just by ensuring that patients receive proper
follow - up care after discharge.
Home visits by a cardiac surgery nurse practitioner (NP)
following coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) surgery can dramatically reduce a patient's risk of
hospital readmission and death 30 days after surgery, according to a study in the May 2014 issue of The Annals of Thoracic Surgery.
Previous research has shown that one in five Medicare patients (20 %) is readmitted to a
hospital within 30 days of discharge
following CABG surgery, and most of those
hospital readmissions are preventable, according to Dr. Hall.
After controlling for severity of disease and surgical complexity, analyses showed that the rate of unplanned 30 - day
readmissions was approximately 78 percent for patients with any complication diagnosed
following discharge from the
hospital.
«Early post-surgery
follow - up visits to primary care physicians cuts
hospital readmissions.»
The patients were
followed for 90 days, after which the researchers found significant reductions in coronary revascularization procedures, fewer
hospital readmissions and fewer recurrent cardiac testing episodes or the need for additional testing.
The
following Q&A was prepared by experts on Ebola and infectious diseases in response to the
readmission to
hospital of Pauline Cafferkey, the nurse who was infected with Ebola in 2014.
Patient 25: A man admitted to
hospital with congestive heart failure and 12 other medical conditions is discharged home without the necessary home care
follow up, placing him at a much higher risk of
readmission.