"Hospital readmissions" refers to when a patient needs to go back to the hospital shortly after being treated and discharged. It means that the person's health problem did not completely resolve and they require further medical attention.
Full definition
«A narrower range suggests that socioeconomic factors could explain a substantial portion of the observed differences in
hospital readmission rates,» said Nagasako, an instructor of medicine.
Early treatment with metoprolol treatment also significantly reduced the rate
of hospital readmission for chronic heart failure, and massively reduced the need to implant a cardioverter - defibrillator.
A new implanted electromechanical pressure sensor reduced the number of
hospital readmissions for chronic heart - failure patients by 30 percent
The researchers looked at how smoking history affected the risk of
hospital readmissions among patients undergoing total joint replacement — either hip or knee replacement.
The study shows that better coordination of care between surgeons and primary care physicians is important to help reduce
hospital readmissions within 30 days for those high - risk surgery patients who have post-operative complications or live with a chronic disease, according to Benjamin S. Brooke, M.D., Ph.D., assistant professor of surgery at the University of Utah School of Medicine and first author on the study.
And for pneumonia, the Medicare model pinned
hospital readmissions at 11.2 percent to 18.6 percent, compared with 13.4 percent to 17.1 percent for the model that incorporated socioeconomic data.
We examined whether trusted Yelp reviews (screened to weed out fraudulent reviews) correlated with health care quality metrics for New York hospitals, including
preventable hospital readmissions and mortality after hospital treatment for certain conditions (such as heart attacks) or procedures (such as stomach surgeries).
«SLE patients have one of the
highest hospital readmission rates compared to those with other chronic illnesses,» explains Jinoos Yazdany, M.D., M.P.H. from the Division of Rheumatology at the University of California, San Francisco.
An analysis of risk factors for
hospital readmission following general surgery finds that a large number of readmissions were not caused by suboptimal medical care or deterioration of medical conditions but by issues related to mental health, substance abuse, or homelessness, according to a study published online by JAMA Surgery.
Theoretically, this will mean that the healthcare industry will have an incentive to work together more closely to ensure that all of a patient's doctors and caregivers are coordinating care to prevent things like
hospital readmissions after surgeries or heart attacks.
A large team of experts led by a Johns Hopkins geriatrician reports that efforts to improve the care of older adults and others with complex medical needs will fall short unless public policymakers focus not only on
preventing hospital readmission rates, but also on better coordination of community - based «care transitions.»
In addition to enhancing the quality of life following a diagnosis, Reynolds said, palliative care research shows an economic benefit from
fewer hospital readmissions.
The study on
senior hospital readmissions, which was published in the August issue of the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, examined data from 53,667 patients who underwent ambulatory surgery in academic medical centers.
Characterizing the patients based on symptom dimensions could predict the length of hospital stay and time to
hospital readmission better than the use of more structured data alone, such as health billing information, that is based on the categorization of disorders.
For example, heart failure and pneumonia are two of the most common diagnoses associated
with hospital readmission, but a study published in 2009 found that most patients who return to the hospital after having one of these conditions do so for seemingly unrelated problems, such as injuries or adverse drug reactions.
Hospital readmissions account for a large share of healthcare spending in the U.S., including more than $ 17 billion of Medicare costs each year.
Previous studies investigating patients at risk for
hospital readmissions focus on medical services and have found chronic conditions as contributors.
Co-existing psychiatric illness should be considered in
assessing hospital readmissions for three common medical conditions used by Medicare and Medicaid to penalize hospitals with «excessive» readmission rates.
Ryan P. Merkow, M.D., M.S., of the American College of Surgeons, Chicago, and colleagues examined the reasons, timing, and factors associated with unplanned
postoperative hospital readmissions within 30 days after surgery.
In 2014, Kangovi and colleagues found evidence that the IMPaCT model improved mental health and
lowered hospital readmission among patients recently discharged from the hospital.
Now consider that literally TENS OF THOUSANDS of American newborns are readmitted to the hospital each year, costing HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS of healthcare dollars because breastfeeding doubles the risk of
newborn hospital readmission.
Readmission to hospitals can be measured by instruments that count 30, 60, and 90
day hospital readmissions, unplanned medical visits, emergency room (ED) visits, length of stay, and the reasons for use.
Patient education concerning diagnosis, lab results, medications and adverse reactions, disease prevention, wellness counseling, post hospital discharge counseling aimed at
preventing hospital readmission, communication liaison between outside facility nurses and physicians
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.
Rather, given the debate over whether Medicare should include socioeconomic factors in its formula to
calculate hospital readmissions, the study raises questions about whether Medicare's readmission rates reflect social factors related to the hospital's patient mix as well as hospital performance and quality.
Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) who participated in any level of moderate to vigorous physical activity had a lower risk of
hospital readmission within 30 days compared to those who were inactive, according to a study published today in the Annals of the American Thoracic Society.
Despite improvement in the rates of people dying of sepsis in the hospital, the condition is still a leading cause
of hospital readmissions and costs, as well as long - term disabilities and impairments, prompting University of Pittsburgh and University of Michigan medical scientists to develop thorough recommendations for post-hospital recovery care and future clinical trials.