• Arch Phys Med Rehabil · Feb 2010

    Discharge destination's effect on bounce-back risk in Black, White, and Hispanic acute ischemic stroke patients.

    • Amy J H Kind, Maureen A Smith, Jinn-Ing Liou, Nancy Pandhi, Jennifer R Frytak, and Michael D Finch.
    • Department of Medicine-Geriatrics Section, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, WI 53705, USA. ajk@medicine.wisc.edu
    • Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2010 Feb 1; 91 (2): 189-95.

    ObjectiveTo determine whether racial and ethnic effects on bounce-back risk (ie, movement to settings of higher care intensity within 30 d of hospital discharge) in acute stroke patients vary depending on initial posthospital discharge destination.DesignRetrospective analysis of administrative data.SettingFour hundred twenty-two hospitals, southern/eastern United States.ParticipantsAll Medicare beneficiaries 65 years or more with hospitalization for acute ischemic stroke within one of the 422 target hospitals during the years 1999 or 2000 (N=63,679).InterventionsNot applicable.Main Outcome MeasuresAdjusted predicted probabilities for discharge to and for bouncing back from each initial discharge site (ie, home, home with home health care, skilled nursing facility [SNF], or rehabilitation center) by race (ie, black, white, and Hispanic). Models included sociodemographics, comorbidities, stroke severity, and length of stay.ResultsBlacks and Hispanics were significantly more likely to be discharged to home health care (blacks=21% [95% confidence interval (CI), 19.9-22.8], Hispanic=19% [17.1-21.7] vs whites=16% [15.5-16.8]) and less likely to be discharged to SNFs (blacks=26% [95% CI, 23.6-29.3], Hispanics=28% [25.4-31.6] vs whites=33% [31.8-35.1]) than whites. However, blacks and Hispanics were significantly more likely to bounce back when discharged to SNFs than whites (blacks=26% [95% CI, 24.2-28.6], Hispanics=28% [24-32.6] vs whites=21% [20.3-21.9]). Hispanics had a lower risk of bouncing back when discharged home than either blacks or whites (Hispanics=14% [95% CI, 11.3-17] vs blacks=20% [18.4-22.2], whites=18% [16.8-18.3]). Patients discharged to home health care or rehabilitation centers demonstrated no significant differences in bounce-back risk.ConclusionsRacial/ethnic bounce-back risk differs depending on initial discharge destination. Additional research is needed to fully understand this variation in effect.Copyright 2010 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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