Medicare-Medicaid eligible beneficiaries and potentially avoidable hospitalizations.

Medicare & medicaid research review Pub Date : 2014-01-15 eCollection Date: 2014-01-01 DOI:10.5600/mmrr.004.01.b01
Misha Segal, Eric Rollins, Kevin Hodges, Michelle Roozeboom
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Abstract

Objective: Potentially avoidable hospitalizations have been identified by experts as leading to poor health outcomes and costly care. Potentially avoidable hospitalizations are particularly common among full-benefit dual eligible beneficiaries. This paper examines potentially avoidable hospitalizations rates by setting, state, and medical condition, and the average cost of these events.

Methods: This analysis identifies potentially avoidable hospitalizations using diagnosis codes identified by an expert panel. Settings of care are determined using a timeline file, which assigns an individual to a specific setting on a particular day.

Population/data source: The analysis uses several different datasets from the Chronic Conditions Data Warehouse. The study population includes fee-for-service beneficiaries who were eligible for both Medicare and full Medicaid benefits for at least one month during the calendar year. The study years are 2007 to 2009.

Results: In 2009, among our study population, 26 percent of hospitalizations were potentially avoidable; and the rate was 133 per 1,000 person-years. Potentially avoidable hospitalizations were much more likely for those beneficiaries who were in institutions--16 percent of beneficiaries in our study population were in an institution, yet comprised 45 percent of all potentially avoidable hospitalizations. The range in rates across the states was considerable, with more than a threefold difference across states. Five conditions were responsible for nearly 80 percent of potentially avoidable hospitalizations. From 2007 to 2009, the national and state rates were fairly consistent.

Discussion: This analysis indicates that the potentially avoidable hospitalization rate among MME beneficiaries was consistently high from 2007 to 2009. This bears monitoring in the future to see if the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services' various initiatives have led to a reduction in rates.

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符合医疗保险-医疗补助资格的受益人和可能避免的住院治疗。
目的:专家指出,潜在可避免的住院治疗会导致不良的健康后果和昂贵的医疗费用。潜在可避免的住院治疗在全额福利双重资格受益人中尤为常见。本文按环境、州和医疗条件对潜在可避免的住院率以及这些事件的平均费用进行了研究:本分析使用专家小组确定的诊断代码来识别潜在可避免的住院治疗。医疗机构是通过时间轴文件确定的,该文件将个人分配到特定日期的特定医疗机构:分析使用了慢性病数据仓库(Chronic Conditions Data Warehouse)中的多个不同数据集。研究对象包括在日历年内至少有一个月同时符合医疗保险和全额医疗补助福利条件的付费服务受益人。研究年份为 2007 年至 2009 年:2009 年,在我们的研究人群中,26% 的住院治疗是可以避免的;住院治疗率为每千人年 133 例。在机构中的受益人更有可能发生潜在可避免的住院治疗--在我们的研究人群中,16% 的受益人在机构中,但却占所有潜在可避免住院治疗的 45%。各州的住院率差距很大,各州之间的差距超过三倍。有五种疾病导致了近 80% 的潜在可避免住院治疗。从 2007 年到 2009 年,全国和各州的比率相当一致:该分析表明,2007 年至 2009 年,医疗保险受益人中潜在可避免的住院率一直居高不下。这值得在未来进行监测,以了解医疗保险与医疗补助服务中心的各种举措是否导致了住院率的下降。
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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