• Health affairs · Aug 2016

    Accounting For Patients' Socioeconomic Status Does Not Change Hospital Readmission Rates.

    • Susannah M Bernheim, Craig S Parzynski, Leora Horwitz, Zhenqiu Lin, Michael J Araas, Joseph S Ross, Elizabeth E Drye, Lisa G Suter, Sharon-Lise T Normand, and Harlan M Krumholz.
    • Susannah M. Bernheim (susannah.bernheim@yale.edu) is director of quality measurement at the Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation (CORE) at Yale-New Haven Hospital and an assistant clinical professor in the Department of Internal Medicine at Yale School of Medicine, both in New Haven, Connecticut.
    • Health Aff (Millwood). 2016 Aug 1; 35 (8): 1461-70.

    AbstractThere is an active public debate about whether patients' socioeconomic status should be included in the readmission measures used to determine penalties in Medicare's Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program (HRRP). Using the current Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services methodology, we compared risk-standardized readmission rates for hospitals caring for high and low proportions of patients of low socioeconomic status (as defined by their Medicaid status or neighborhood income). We then calculated risk-standardized readmission rates after additionally adjusting for patients' socioeconomic status. Our results demonstrate that hospitals caring for large proportions of patients of low socioeconomic status have readmission rates similar to those of other hospitals. Moreover, readmission rates calculated with and without adjustment for patients' socioeconomic status are highly correlated. Readmission rates of hospitals caring for patients of low socioeconomic status changed by approximately 0.1 percent with adjustment for patients' socioeconomic status, and only 3-4 percent fewer such hospitals reached the threshold for payment penalty in Medicare's HRRP. Overall, adjustment for socioeconomic status does not change hospital results in meaningful ways.Project HOPE—The People-to-People Health Foundation, Inc.

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