Financial and organizational determinants of hospital diversification into subacute care. (1/35)

OBJECTIVE: To examine the financial, market, and organizational determinants of hospital diversification into subacute inpatient care by acute care hospitals in order to guide hospital managers in undertaking such diversification efforts. STUDY SETTING: All nongovernment, general, acute care, community hospitals that were operating during the years 1985 through 1991 (3,986 hospitals in total). DATA SOURCES: Cross-sectional, time-series data were drawn from the American Hospital Association's (AHA) Annual Survey of Hospitals, the Health Care Financing Administration's (HCFA) Medicare Cost Reports, a latitude and longitude listing for all community hospital addresses, and the Area Resource File (ARF) published in 1992, which provides county level environmental variables. STUDY DESIGN: The study is longitudinal, enabling the specification of temporal patterns in conversion, causal inferences, and the treatment of right-censoring problems. The unit of analysis is the individual hospital. KEY FINDINGS: Significant differences were found in the average level of subacute care offered by investor-owned versus tax-exempt hospitals. After controlling for selection bias, financial performance, risk, size, occupancy, and other variables, IO hospitals offered 31.3 percent less subacute care than did NFP hospitals. Financial performance and risk are predictors of IO hospitals' diversification into subacute care, but not of NFP hospitals' activities in this market. Resource availability appears to expedite expansion into subacute care for both types of hospitals. CONCLUSIONS: Investment criteria and strategy differ between investor-owned and tax-exempt hospitals.  (+info)

Medicare program; prospective payment system and consolidated billing for skilled nursing facilities--update. Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA), HHS. Final rule. (2/35)

This final rule sets forth updates to the payment rates used under the prospective payment system (PPS) for skilled nursing facilities (SNFs), for fiscal year 2001. Annual updates to the PPS rates are required by section 1888(e) of the Social Security Act, as amended by the Medicare, Medicaid and State Child Health Insurance Program Balanced Budget Refinement Act of 1999, related to Medicare payments and consolidated billing for SNFs. In addition, this rule sets forth certain conforming revisions to the regulations that are necessary in order to implement amendments made to the Act by section 103 of the Medicare, Medicaid and State Child Health Insurance Program Balanced Budget Refinement Act of 1999.  (+info)

Surviving the prospective payment system: potential problems and solutions to ensure quality of care. (3/35)

In response to diagnosis-related group payment systems and changing social structures, many hospital systems have created alternative discharge sites, thus shifting care to subacute units offering comprehensive inpatient programs of cost-effective restorative care. The growth in expenditures for these postacute services led to the implementation of the prospective payment system (PPS). This article discusses factors involved in calculating reimbursement and solutions to such problems as inadequate reimbursement, quality of care, and documentation requirements. For subacute care to succeed clinically and financially, a basis for collaboration between hospital-based referring physicians and subacute unit directors must be established; patient satisfaction and quality of care must be monitored closely; and a well-trained nursing staff with frequent in-service training in patient care should be employed. The reorganization tactics suggested in this article may help a subacute facility function in an efficient way at acceptable costs while maintaining high quality patient care.  (+info)

Acute and subacute stent occlusion; risk-reduction by ionic contrast media. (4/35)

AIMS: Current data concerning the influence of X-ray contrast media on the incidence of thrombotic complications in interventional cardiology are controversial. The effect of ionic contrast media on acute (< or =72 h) and subacute (< or =30 days) stent thrombosis has not been investigated. METHODS: Three thousand, nine hundred and ninety consecutive patients underwent coronary stent placement. Group I (n=1808) received non-ionic contrast media while group II (n=2182) was given the ionic Ioxaglate. All patients were treated with a standard regimen of aspirin and ticlopidine for 4 weeks post intervention. RESULTS: Both acute and subacute stent occlusion occurred more frequently in patients receiving non-ionic contrast media compared to ionic contrast media (acute stent occlusion: 1.3% in group I vs 0.3% in group II, P=0.001; subacute stent occlusion: 2.4% in group I vs 0.7% in group II, P=0.001). The incidence of the combined clinical end-point of coronary artery bypass grafting, target lesion revascularization, and overall mortality within 12 months was significantly reduced by the use of Ioxaglate (22.9% vs 16.3%, P=0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Based upon these data, we recommend the use of Ioxaglate in coronary interventions when stent placement is anticipated.  (+info)

Mental practice combined with physical practice for upper-limb motor deficit in subacute stroke. (5/35)

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: This case report describes a patient with upper-limb hemiparesis (ULH) who received a program combining physical therapy for the affected side with mental practice. CASE DESCRIPTION: The patient was a 56-year-old man with stable motor deficits, including ULH, on his dominant side resulting from a right parietal infarct that occurred 5 months previously. He received physical therapy for an hour 3 times a week for 6 weeks. In addition, 2 times a week the patient listened to an audiotape instructing him to imagine himself functionally using the affected limb. The patient also listened to the audiotape at home 2 times a week. Pretreatment and posttreatment measures were the upper-extremity scale of the Fugl-Meyer Assessment of Sensorimotor Impairment (Fugl-Meyer Scale), the Action Research Arm Test (ARA), and the Stroke Rehabilitation Assessment of Movement (STREAM). OUTCOMES: The patient exhibited reduction in impairment (Fugl-Meyer Scale) and improvement in arm function, as measured by the ARA and STREAM. DISCUSSION: Mental practice may complement physical therapy to improve motor function after stroke.  (+info)

Malnutrition in subacute care. (6/35)

BACKGROUND: Dramatic weight loss and hypoalbuminemia often follow acute hospitalization. OBJECTIVE: The objective was to examine the prevalence of undernutrition in a subacute-care facility. DESIGN: We evaluated 837 patients consecutively admitted over 14 mo to a 100-bed subacute-care center. Nutritional status was assessed by anthropometric measurements, biochemical markers, and a Mini Nutritional Assessment (MNA) score. Primary outcome measures included length of stay and death. Secondary measures included readmission to an acute-care hospital and placement at discharge. RESULTS: The subjects' mean (+/- SD) age was 76 +/- 13 y and 61% were women. Eighteen percent of the subjects had a body mass index (in kg/m(2)) <19. With the use of 35 g/L as a cutoff, 53% of the subjects had hypoalbuminemia. Only 8% of the subjects were classified as being well nourished according to the MNA. Almost one-third (29%) of the subjects were malnourished and almost two-thirds (63%) were at risk of malnutrition. Thus, >91% of subjects admitted to subacute care were either malnourished or at risk of malnutrition. The Geriatric Depression Score was higher in malnourished subjects than in nutritionally at-risk subjects (P = 0.05). Length of stay differed by 11 d between the malnourished group and the nutritionally at-risk group (P = 0.007). In the MNA-assessed group of largely malnourished subjects, 25% of subjects required readmission to an acute-care hospital compared with 11% of the well-nourished group (P = 0.06). Mortality was not found to be related to BMI. CONCLUSION: Malnutrition reaches epidemic proportions in patients admitted to subacute-care facilities. Whether this reflects nutritional neglect in acute-care hospitals or is the result of profound illness is unclear. Nevertheless, strict attention to nutritional status is mandatory in subacute-care settings.  (+info)

Access to postacute nursing home care before and after the BBA. Balanced Budget Act. (7/35)

Anecdotal reports in the wake of the Balanced Budget Act (BBA) of 1997 raised concerns about restricted access to postacute nursing facility care for Medicare beneficiaries requiring costly, medically complex services. Using all Medicare Part A hospital and nursing facility claims for providers in the state of Ohio and a refined method of identifying hospitalized beneficiaries who were the most at risk, we observed only a small decrease in the proportion of the costliest patients discharged to nursing facilities in 1999 compared with pre-BBA years. Average hospital length-of-stay increased only slightly in 1999, and there were no changes in rehospitalization rates for the costliest patient types. However, reduced rates of admission were concentrated in specific types of nursing facilities, suggesting a need to closely monitor the effects of ongoing post-BBA policy updates.  (+info)

Rehabilitation therapy in skilled nursing facilities: effects of Medicare's new prospective payment system. (8/35)

In 1998 the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) began phasing in a new prospective payment system (PPS) for Medicare payments to skilled nursing facilities (SNFs). I examine the effects of the new PPS on the level of rehabilitation therapy provided in SNFs. The percentage of residents of freestanding SNFs receiving extremely high levels of rehabilitation therapy dropped significantly, and the percentage receiving moderate levels increased. Freestanding SNFs, particularly for-profits, dramatically altered the services they provided in response to new financial incentives. This responsiveness underscores the importance of efforts now under way to refine the SNF PPS.  (+info)