Volume 44 | Number 4 | August 2009

Abstract List

Melinda Beeuwkes Buntin, Carrie Hoverman Colla, José J. Escarce


Objective

To test how the implementation of new Medicare post‐acute payment systems affected the use of inpatient rehabilitation facilities (IRFs), skilled nursing facilities (SNFs), and home health agencies.


Data Sources

Medicare acute hospital, IRF, and SNF claims; provider of services file; enrollment file; and Area Resource File data.


Study Design

We used multinomial logit models to measure realized access to post‐acute care and to predict how access to alternative sites of care changed in response to prospective payment systems.


Data Extraction Methods

A file was constructed linking data for elderly Medicare patients discharged from acute care facilities between 1996 and 2003 with a diagnosis of hip fracture, stroke, or lower extremity joint replacement.


Principal Findings

Although the effects of the payment systems on the use of post‐acute care varied, most reduced the use of the site of care they directly affected and boosted the use of alternative sites of care. Payment system changes do not appear to have differentially affected the severely ill.


Conclusions

Payment system incentives play a significant role in determining where Medicare beneficiaries receive their post‐acute care. Changing these incentives results in shifting of patients between post‐acute sites.