The impact of hospital-acquired conditions on Medicare program payments.

Medicare & medicaid research review Pub Date : 2014-10-29 eCollection Date: 2014-01-01 DOI:10.5600/mmrr.004.04.a01
Amy M G Kandilov, Nicole M Coomer, Kathleen Dalton
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引用次数: 34

Abstract

Research objective: Hospital-acquired conditions, or HACs, often result in additional Medicare payments, generated during the initial hospitalization and in subsequent health care encounters. The purpose of this article is to estimate the incremental cost to Medicare, as measured by Medicare program payments, of six HACs.

Study design: The researchers used a matched case-control design to determine the incremental increase in Medicare payments attributable to each HAC. For each HAC patient, five comparison patients were matched on diagnosis group, sex, race, and age. Using the matched sample, we estimated a hospital fixed effects log-linear regression on total Medicare payments for the episode of care, further controlling for co-morbid conditions. Care episodes included the initial hospitalization and all inpatient, outpatient, physician, home health, and hospice care that occurred within 90 days of hospital discharge.

Population studied: All Medicare fee-for-service patients discharged alive from a hospital between October 2008 and June 2010 with one of six HACs-severe pressure ulcer, fracture, catheter-associated urinary tract infection, vascular catheter-associated infection, surgical site infection following certain orthopedic procedures, or deep vein thrombosis/ pulmonary embolism following certain orthopedic procedures-were included in the sample and matched to five similar patients without the HACs.

Principal findings: The multivariate analysis suggests that Medicare paid an additional $146 million per year across these HAC care episodes compared with what would have been paid without the HACs.

Conclusions: HACs create a significant financial burden for the Medicare program. We compare the incremental Medicare payments for these six HACs to the current and upcoming Medicare HAC payment penalties.

医院获得性疾病对医疗保险计划支付的影响。
研究目的:医院获得性疾病,或HACs,通常导致额外的医疗保险支付,产生于最初的住院和随后的卫生保健就诊。本文的目的是估计医疗保险的增量成本,作为衡量医疗保险计划的支付,六个HACs。研究设计:研究人员使用匹配的病例对照设计来确定归因于每个HAC的医疗保险支付的增量增加。对于每个HAC患者,在诊断组、性别、种族和年龄上匹配5例对照患者。使用匹配的样本,我们估计了医院固定效应对数线性回归对总医疗保险支付的护理,进一步控制合并症的条件。护理事件包括初次住院以及出院后90天内发生的所有住院、门诊、医生、家庭健康和临终关怀。研究人群:所有在2008年10月至2010年6月期间因六种HACs(严重压疮、骨折、导尿管相关尿路感染、血管导尿管相关感染、某些骨科手术后的手术部位感染或某些骨科手术后的深静脉血栓形成/肺栓塞)之一而活出院的医疗保险服务收费患者被纳入样本,并与五名没有HACs的类似患者相匹配。主要发现:多变量分析表明,与没有HAC相比,医疗保险每年在这些HAC护理期间额外支付了1.46亿美元。结论:HACs给医疗保险计划带来了巨大的经济负担。我们将这六个HAC的增量医疗保险支付与当前和即将到来的医疗保险HAC支付罚款进行比较。
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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