The extended impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on long-term care residents in Medicare with frailty or dual Medicaid enrollment.

Sunny C Lin, Jie Zheng, Arnold Epstein, E John Orav, Michael Barnett, David C Grabowski, Karen E Joynt Maddox
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Abstract

Background: Although many healthcare settings have since returned to pre-pandemic levels of operation, long-term care (LTC) facilities have experienced extended and significant changes to operations, including unprecedented levels of short staffing and facility closures, that may have a detrimental effect on resident outcomes. This study assessed the pandemic's extended effect on outcomes for LTC residents, comparing outcomes 1 and 2 years after the start of the pandemic to pre-pandemic times, with special focus on residents with frailty and dually enrolled in Medicare and Medicaid.

Methods: Using Medicare claims data from January 1, 2018, through December 31, 2022, we ran over-dispersed Poisson models to compare the monthly adjusted rates of emergency department use, hospitalization, and mortality among LTC residents, comparing residents with and without frailty and dually enrolled and non-dually enrolled residents.

Results: Two years after the start of the pandemic, adjusted emergency department (ED) and hospitalization rates were lower and adjusted mortality rates were higher compared with pre-pandemic years for all examined subgroups. For example, compared with 2018-2019, 2022 ED visit rates for dually enrolled residents were 0.89 times lower, hospitalization rates were 0.87 times lower, and mortality rates were 1.17 higher; 2022 ED visit rates for frail residents were 0.85 times lower, hospitalization rates were 0.83 times lower, and mortality rates were 1.21 higher.

Conclusions: In 2022, emergency department and hospital utilization rates among long-term residents were lower than pre-pandemic levels and mortality rates were higher than pre-pandemic levels. These findings suggest that the pandemic has had an extended impact on outcomes for LTC residents.

COVID-19大流行病对参加医疗保险、体弱多病或同时参加医疗补助计划的长期护理居民的长期影响。
背景:尽管许多医疗机构已经恢复到大流行前的运营水平,但长期护理(LTC)机构的运营却经历了长时间的重大变化,包括前所未有的人员短缺和机构关闭,这可能会对居民的预后产生不利影响。本研究评估了大流行病对长期护理机构居民预后的长期影响,比较了大流行病开始后 1 年和 2 年与大流行病发生前的预后,特别关注了体弱居民和同时参加了医疗保险和医疗补助计划的居民:利用 2018 年 1 月 1 日至 2022 年 12 月 31 日的医疗保险报销数据,我们运行了过度分散泊松模型,比较了 LTC 居民每月调整后的急诊室使用率、住院率和死亡率,并对体弱居民和非体弱居民、双重参保居民和非双重参保居民进行了比较:大流行开始两年后,与大流行前相比,所有受检亚组的调整后急诊室(ED)使用率和住院率均有所下降,调整后死亡率则有所上升。例如,与 2018-2019 年相比,2022 年双职工居民的急诊室就诊率降低了 0.89 倍,住院率降低了 0.87 倍,死亡率提高了 1.17 倍;2022 年体弱居民的急诊室就诊率降低了 0.85 倍,住院率降低了 0.83 倍,死亡率提高了 1.21 倍:2022 年,长期居民的急诊室和医院使用率低于大流行前的水平,死亡率高于大流行前的水平。这些研究结果表明,大流行对长期护理中心居民的治疗效果产生了广泛的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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