The Affordable Care Act (ACA) of 2010 created punishments for
hospitals with high rates of readmissions within 30 days of
discharge for Medicare patients with three common problems: heart
failure, pneumonia and heart attacks. Readmissions are considered a
benchmark for the quality of care, and in theory hospitals that do a
better job shouldn’t have as many patients returning soon after
they’re sent home.
In one respect, the law worked as intended. Researchers examined
data on 115,245 heart failure patients hospitalized from 2006 to
2014 and found readmission rates dropped from 20 percent before the
law took effect to 18.4 percent after penalties kicked in.
But the proportion of patients who died within 30 days of going home
increased from 7.2 percent to 8.6 percent over that same period.
One-year mortality rates climbed from 31.3 percent to 36.3 percent.
“Nationwide, there may have been thousands to tens of thousands of
extra deaths in patients with heart failure resulting from this
policy,” said senior study author Dr. Gregg Fonarow of the David
Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California Los
Angeles.
“No level of reduction in readmissions or cost savings should be
considered adequate justification for this level of potential harm,”
Fonarow said by email.
Heart failure happens when the heart muscle is too weak to
effectively pump enough blood through the body. Symptoms can include
fatigue, weight gain from fluid retention, shortness of breath and
coughing or wheezing. Medications can help strengthen the heart and
minimize fluid buildup in the body.
The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how reducing readmission rates might influence survival odds for
patients with heart failure.
It’s possible, however, that doctors may have made treatment
decisions designed to avoid readmissions rather than to give
patients the best possible care, Fonarow said.
Doctors might, for example, have postponed sending patients back to
the hospital until after the 30-day window for readmission penalties
had passed, allowing heart failure to worsen and decreasing survival
odds, Fonarow said.
When patients did return to the hospital within that 30-day penalty
window, they might have been kept in the emergency department or a
general care unit for observation instead of being formally admitted
to the hospital, Fonarow added. This might mean some people who
needed intensive care or a specialized cardiac unit didn’t end up
there.
[to top of second column] |
To calculate shifts in readmission and mortality rates, researchers
looked at three distinct time periods: before the ACA, from January
1, 2006 to March 31, 2010; during an ACA implementation period from
April 1, 2010 to September 30, 2012; and after readmission penalties
kicked in, from October 1, 2012 to December 31, 2014.
The study looked at data from a total of 416 hospitals, but not at
how changes in readmission rates were related to mortality rates at
specific hospitals, researchers note in JAMA Cardiology.
One study that did focus on hospital-level data, published in JAMA
in July, got different results, according to its lead author, Dr.
Kumar Dharmarajan, chief scientific officer at Clover Health, a San
Francisco-based health insurance startup company.
“While we too found slight increases in mortality for heart failure
over time, we found that hospitals lowering readmissions tended to
lower mortality despite this finding,” Dharmarajan said by email.
“Given our results, it is very unclear to me how efforts to lower
readmissions could have resulted in harm.”
Other factors during the study period, like hospital closures and an
economic downturn that’s made it harder for many people to afford
medications, might also explain some of the change in mortality
rates, said Dr. Karen Joynt Maddox of Barnes-Jewish Hospital and the
Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
“It’s important to note that we’re looking at patterns over a decade
across the country, where a lot of things are happening at once,”
Maddox, who wasn’t involved in the study, said by email. “We really
need more research to understand these findings so we can figure out
what to do.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2AJqmRR JAMA Cardiology, online November 12,
2017.
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |