Provisions within the recently passed health reform law provide support for new approaches to reducing the high cost of care for clinically complex patients. This article describes the characteristics of a recent transitional care pilot initiative that aims to reduce hospital readmissions among high-risk heart failure patients. The program was designed and implemented through a joint collaboration between a Certified Home Healthcare Agency and regional hospital. As a preliminary assessment of the impact of this program on patient outcomes, we compare the odds of rehospitalization among patients who received the transitional care services (n = 223) and a similar group of patients who received usual home care services (n = 224). Analyses indicated that patients who received the transitional care services were significantly less likely to be readmitted to the hospital than the patients in the control group. Although preliminary, our findings suggest that providing transitional care services to high-risk heart failure patients can be an effective deterrent against patterns of rehospitalization. The opportunities and challenges associated with implementing this pilot program are discussed.
A growing body of evidence suggests that patients who receive coordinated and uninterrupted health care services have better outcomes, more efficient resource utilization, and lower costs of health care. However, limited research has considered whether attributes of continuity in home health care service delivery are associated with improved patient outcomes. The present study examines the relationship between one dimension of continuity of care, consistency in nursing personnel, and three patient outcomes: hospitalization, emergent care, and improvement in activities of daily living. Analyses of data from a large population of home health patients (N=59,854) suggest that greater consistency in nursing personnel decreases the probability of hospitalization and emergent care, and increases the likelihood of improved functioning in activities of daily living between admission and discharge from home health care. These results provide preliminary evidence that efforts to decrease dispersion of nursing personnel across a series of home visits to patients may lead to improved outcomes. The implications of these findings for clinical practice and further research are discussed in the paper.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.