Volume 49 | Number 3 | June 2014

Abstract List

Qian Gu Ph.D., Lane Koenig Ph.D., Jennifer Faerberg M.H.S.A., Caroline Rossi Steinberg M.B.A., Christopher Vaz Ph.D., Mary P. Wheatley M.S.


Objective

To explore the impact of the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program () on hospitals serving vulnerable populations.


Data Sources/Study Setting

Medicare inpatient claims to calculate condition‐specific readmission rates. Medicare cost reports and other sources to determine a hospital's share of duals, profit margin, and characteristics.


Study Design

Regression analyses and projections were used to estimate risk‐adjusted readmission rates and financial penalties under the . Findings were compared across groups of hospitals, determined based on their share of duals, to assess differential impacts of the .


Principal Findings

Both patient dual‐eligible status and a hospital's dual‐eligible share of Medicare discharges have a positive impact on risk‐adjusted hospital readmission rates. Under current Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Service methodology, which does not adjust for socioeconomic status, high‐dual hospitals are more likely to have excess readmissions than low‐dual hospitals. As a result, penalties will disproportionately fall on high‐dual hospitals, which are more likely to have negative all‐payer margins, raising concerns of unintended consequences of the program for vulnerable populations.


Conclusions

Policies to reduce hospital readmissions must balance the need to ensure continued access to quality care for vulnerable populations.