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Last summer, Medicare started posting hospital readmission rates for the three worst conditions
-- heart failure, heart attack and pneumonia -- on its Web site, peer pressure for hospitals to improve. And either as part of Congress' pending overhaul of the health care system or its own regulations, Medicare eventually hopes to cut payments for rehospitalizations in ways that encourage better upfront care. "Even the best hospitals have room for improvement," says Straube, who hopes to expand the Care Transitions program to all states in a few years. As for the payment debate: "Shame on us for paying you for things that should really in many cases not have happened," he says. Not every rehospitalization is preventable, says Yale's Krumholz, and there's no one solution that will help every hospital lower the rate. When discharging heart patients, "you hold your breath a little bit," he says. "They're vulnerable, they're tired, they heard messages from a bunch of different people." Nor is it an issue just for Medicare. At Duke University Medical Center, trauma nurse Jo Ellen Holt takes photos with patients' own cell phones to guide them through the home care required to avoid infection and rehospitalization. It started with a man in his 50s whose arm was rebuilt with muscle and skin from elsewhere on his body after a machine accident. The discharge nurse cleared the man to leave, assuming his wife could clean his arm and change his bandages
-- only to have Holt discover right before the couple left that the woman couldn't stomach the task. So Holt snapped a photo of each step, helping the man remember the order of each solution and ointment and type of gauze. One-armed, he cleaned his own wound fine. "I want to help them be independent," Holt says.
[Associated
Press;
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