Volume 52 | Number 4 | August 2017

Abstract List

Christopher M. Murtaugh Ph.D., Partha Deb Ph.D., Carolyn Zhu Ph.D., Timothy R. Peng Ph.D., Yolanda Barrón M.S., Shivani Shah M.P.H., Stanley M. Moore B.S., Kathryn H. Bowles Ph.D., Jill Kalman M.D., Penny H. Feldman Ph.D., Albert L. Siu M.D., M.S.P.H.


Objective

To compare the effectiveness of two “treatments”—early, intensive home health nursing and physician follow‐up within a week—versus less intense and later postacute care in reducing readmissions among heart failure () patients discharged to home health care.


Data Sources

National Medicare administrative, claims, and patient assessment data.


Study Design

Patients with a full week of potential exposure to the treatments were followed for 30 days to determine exposure status, 30‐day all‐cause hospital readmission, other health care use, and mortality. An extension of instrumental variables methods for nonlinear statistical models corrects for nonrandom selection of patients into treatment categories. Our instruments are the index hospital's rate of early aftercare for non‐ patients and hospital discharge day of the week.


Data Extraction Methods

All hospitalizations for a principal diagnosis with discharge to home health care between July 2009 and June 2010 were identified from source files.


Principal Findings

Neither treatment by itself has a statistically significant effect on hospital readmission. In combination, however, they reduce the probability of readmission by roughly 8 percentage points ( < .001; confidence interval = −12.3, −4.1). Results are robust to changes in implementation of the nonlinear estimator, sample, outcome measure, and length of follow‐up.


Conclusions

Our results call for closer coordination between home health and medical providers in the clinical management of patients immediately after hospital discharge.