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- Sara Turbow, Nikkil Sudharsanan, Kimberly J Rask, and Mohammed K Ali.
- Department of Medicine, Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, 49 Jesse Hill Jr Dr SE, Atlanta, GA 30303. Email: sara.turbow@emory.edu.
- Am J Manag Care. 2021 May 1; 27 (5): e164-e170.
ObjectivesTo assess in-hospital mortality, length of stay, and costs associated with interhospital fragmentation in 30-day readmissions and to determine whether these associations were more or less pronounced for patients with specific high-prevalence conditions.Study DesignCross-sectional analysis using the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality's National Readmissions Database for 2013 and 2014.MethodsAll patients 18 years and older with a 30-day readmission in 2014 were included. We assessed if readmission to a hospital different from that of the index admission was associated with in-hospital mortality, length of stay, and costs of readmission, separately by whether the readmission occurred for the same or different major diagnostic category. Patients with 1 of 3 common diagnoses (congestive heart failure [CHF], chronic obstructive pulmonary disease [COPD], or myocardial infarction) were studied for disease-specific trends. The same analyses were performed on 2013 data as a sensitivity analysis.ResultsIn 2014, among 792,596 patients with a 30-day readmission, 22.2% experienced fragmentation. Compared with patients whose readmission occurred at the index hospital, patients readmitted to a different hospital experienced 20% higher odds of dying in hospital (P = .02 for same diagnosis readmission; P = .03 for different diagnosis readmission), a half-a-day longer length of stay (P < .001 for both same and different diagnosis readmissions), and more than $1000 higher costs (P < .001 for both same and different diagnosis readmissions). For patients with a CHF or COPD index admission, mortality was consistently higher for fragmented readmissions for a different condition.ConclusionsFragmented readmissions were associated with higher in-hospital mortality and cost. Clinical variation across conditions warrants further investigation to optimize pre- and postdischarge operations and policy.
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