• Arch Phys Med Rehabil · Nov 2015

    Omission of Physical Therapy Recommendations for High-Risk Patients Transitioning From the Hospital to Subacute Care Facilities.

    • Brock Polnaszek, Jacquelyn Mirr, Rachel Roiland, Andrea Gilmore-Bykovskyi, Melissa Hovanes, and Amy Kind.
    • Department of Medicine, Geriatrics Division, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, WI.
    • Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2015 Nov 1; 96 (11): 1966-72.e3.

    ObjectivesTo assess the quality and explore the potential impact of the communication of physical therapy (PT) recommendations in hospital discharge summaries/orders for high-risk subacute care populations, specifically targeting recommendations for (1) maintenance of patient safety, (2) assistance required for mobility, and (3) use of assistive devices.DesignMedical record abstraction of retrospective cohort comparing discharge recommendations made by inpatient PT to orders included in written hospital discharge summaries/orders, the primary form of hospital-to-subacute care communication. Data were linked to Medicare outcomes from corresponding years for all Medicare beneficiaries in the cohort.SettingAcademic hospital.ParticipantsAll hospitalized patients (N=613 overall) 18 years and older with primary diagnoses of stroke or hip fracture, with an inpatient PT consultation and discharged to subacute care during the years 2006 to 2008; 366 of these were Medicare beneficiaries.InterventionsNot applicable.Main Outcome MeasuresCombined rehospitalization, emergency department visit, and/or death within 30 days of discharge.ResultsOmission of recommendations for maintaining patient safety occurred in 54% (316/584) of patients; for assistance required for mobility, in approximately 100% (535/537); and for use of assistive devices, in 77% (409/532). As compared with those without patient safety restriction/precaution omissions, Medicare beneficiaries with such omissions demonstrated a trend toward more negative 30-day outcomes (26% vs 18%, P=.10). Similar, albeit nonsignificant, outcome trends were observed in the other omission categories.ConclusionsPT recommendations made during a hospital stay in high-risk patients are routinely omitted from hospital discharge communications to subacute care facilities. Interventions to reliably improve this communication are needed.Copyright © 2015 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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