UTMB Study Suggests Recovery at HOME could Improve Outcomes!

UTMB Study Suggests Recovery at HOME could Improve Outcomes!

By The Gerontological Society of America, Courtesy Unlimited Care of North Texas, Inc., Denton LIVING WELL Magazine

Confirming many patients’ worst fears, a national study has shown that being hospitalized for an acute event, such as a stroke or hip fracture, can lead to long-term institutionalization in a nursing home. Equally alarming, researchers found that direct discharge to a skilled nursing facility—common practice designed to reduce hospital stays—puts patients at “extreme high risk” of needing long-term nursing home care.

According to researchers at the University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) in Galveston, these findings suggest that programs aimed at helping older patients recuperate successfully at home— instead of in an institutional setting—could greatly improve their health outcomes and reduce healthcare costs. The study is published online in the Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences.

“Hospitalization is a tipping point for old patients, often reducing their ability to live as independently as before,” says lead author James S. Goodwin, M.D., director, Sealy Center on Aging at UTMB and the George & Cynthia Mitchell Distinguished Chair in Geriatric Medicine.

Goodwin also notes that certain factors common among the elderly, such as cognition problems, frailty, and lack of social support, increase the risk of nursing home institutionalization.

“Add the enormous systemic pressure to reduce hospital stays and a dearth of viable programs to help patients fully recover their health and independence after hospitalization, and there simply isn’t a clear path to get the patient back home,” he says.

Medicare pays 100% for 20 days at a skilled nursing facility for patients who have just been released from the hospital but still need extra care.

“There is a very narrowly defined view of what Medicare will provide post-hospital,” says Goodwin. “If Medicare payment guidelines were broadened to cover in-home care—bathing and food preparation for example—there is a tremendous potential for saving and patients could adjust gradually back to their familiar home environment. Medicare will not pay for the in-home care.”

Goodwin and his colleagues measured a 5% sample of Medicare enrollees (approximately 762,000) aged 66 or older between 1996 and 2008 that were admitted to nursing homes. Of that population, 75% were admitted to a nursing home for long-term care within six months of a hospital stay.

According to Goodwin, the period studied paralleled a time of growth in the use of skilled nursing facilities, which may have been due to Medicare adoption of a prospective payment system that encouraged hospitals to reduce the length of stays.
Institutionalization after hospitalization increased with older age, in women and in patients without a primary care physician. The odds of institutionalization were also more than six-fold higher in patients with a dementia diagnosis and increased in patients with other conditions, including delirium and incontinence.

Being transferred to a skilled nursing facility on discharge was the primary risk factor leading to substantial long-term care. The percent of hospitalized Medicare patients transferred on discharge increased from 10.8% in 1996 to 16.5% in 2008. Additionally, the study found that nearly 65% of patients in a nursing home six months after hospitalization had first been transferred to a skilled nursing facility. This was up from 50% in 1996.

Researchers also found several factors that reduced the risk of long-term institutionalization. Patients cared for in larger hospitals and major teaching hospitals were less likely to be in a nursing home six months after discharge, as were patients treated by their primary care physicians.

Goodwin recommends that hospitals consider alternatives to skilled nursing facilities post-hospitalization, such as in-home care, community-based facilities, and assisted living facilities. Developing preventive programs that target the population at-risk for long-term nursing home care—hospitalized Medicare patients—may serve as another avenue to avert long-term institutionalization.

“There is no perfect solution for caring for patients who may not be able to function completely independently and who lack a social network of able caregivers,” says Goodwin. “We do know that most people fervently wish to remain at home and it is our responsibility to help avoid preventable nursing home admissions.”

If you have questions concerning the cost and effectiveness of In-Home Care whether it is four to five hours a day or 24-Hour Live-in Care, phone Unlimited Care of North Texas, Inc., at 940- 390-0493 for FREE CONSULTATIONS.