Title: Potentially Preventable Readmissions
1Potentially Preventable Readmissions
Clinical Logic and Review July 2010
2What is a Potentially Preventable Readmission
(PPR)?
- A return hospitalization within a specified time
interval that reasonable clinicians would agree
was likely related to the initial hospital stay,
and was potentially preventable by means of - Excellent care during the first hospitalization
and - Best possible coordination with the outpatient
setting including - outpatient health professional team and
- the patient/family/caregiver.
3What is Not a Potentially Preventable Readmission?
- A return hospitalization that is
- Due to an unrelated event that occurred after
discharge (broken leg due to trauma), or - Due to a related but unpreventable event that
occurred after discharge (alteration in
consciousness after admission for a brain tumor) - Planned at the time of the discharge from the
initial admission (angioplasty after an admission
for angina).
4Why Develop a Method to Identify Potentially
Preventable Readmissions?
- Compare performance to enhance quality of care
- Costs associated with readmissions are
substantial - Possible measure for pay for performance systems
- Readmission rates will provide additional
information on quality of care and the need for
better coordination of services - Length of stay, cost and mortality address only
limited aspects of quality of care - Death in hospital is a relatively rare event
5General Guidelines for PPRs
Readmission Readmission
Initial Admission Medical Surgical
Medical PPR except if clearly unrelated acute events Not PPR unless initial medical diagnosis clearly should have resulted in surgery
Surgical PPR except conditions clearly unrelated PPR if related to prior surgery
6PPR Global Exclusions
- If any of the following conditions apply to the
initial admission, a subsequent readmission is
globally excluded from consideration as a PPR - Admissions for which follow-up care is
intrinsically extensive and complex - Major or metastatic malignancies treated
medically - Multiple trauma, burns
- Discharge status indicates limited hospital
provider control - Left against medical advice
- Transferred to another acute care hospital
- Neonates
- Other exclusions
- Specific eye procedures and infections
- Cystic fibrosis with pulmonary diagnoses
- Died not included as candidate initial
admissions (denominator) - PPR Definition Manual Appendix E for List of
Globally Excluded APR DRGs - PPR Definition Manual Appendix G for List of
Major and Metastatic Malignant Diagnoses
7Clinical Factors make a readmission not
potentially preventable
- No clinical relationship to prior discharge
- Cholecystectomy two weeks after hip replacement
- Discharge status of prior discharge
- AMA and transferred to another acute care
hospital - Type of prior discharge
- Follow-up care is intrinsically complex and
extensive - Metatastic malignancies, Multiple trauma, Burns
- Longer interval between discharge and readmission
- Long time intervals (gt30 days) reduce confidence
that readmission is causally linked to the prior
discharge
8Clinical Relation Reasons 1 and 2
- 1 Medical readmission for a continuation or
recurrence of the reason for the initial
admission, or for a closely related condition. - The most common example of this type of
readmission is a patient discharged from and
admission for Congestive Heart Failure who is
then readmitted for the same reason - 2 Medical readmission for an acute decompensation
of a chronic problem that was not the principal
reason for the initial admission, but may be
related to care either during or after the
initial admission. - Such readmissions could be triggered by failure
to renew lapsed prescriptions or incomplete
instruction about returning to a previous medical
regimen at the time of discharge,
miscommunication about changes in a regimen that
could affect an underlying chronic condition,
lack of prompt follow-up by a primary care team,
or failure to communicate in-hospital events,
changes in the medical regimen, and issues that
require ongoing monitoring to the primary care
provider. - 2a Ambulatory care sensitive conditions as
designated by ARHQ - Examples would be patients who, regardless of the
reason for their initial admission, are
readmitted for uncontrolled diabetes, asthma or
COPD exacerbation, uncontrolled hypertension, or
urinary tract infection - 2b All other readmissions for a chronic problem
that may be related to care either during or
after the initial admission - Examples would be readmissions for diabetic
neuropathy, interstitial lung disease,
cardiomyopathy, or Alzheimer dementia
9Clinical Relation Reasons 3, 4, and 5
- 3 Medical readmission for an acute medical
condition or complication that may be related to
or may have resulted from care during the initial
admission or in the post-discharge period after
the initial admission. - Examples Patients discharged after elective
surgery readmitted with a urinary tract infection
likely related to an indwelling foley catheter
during the initial admission or readmitted with
a post-operative wound infection - 4 Readmission for a surgical procedure to address
a continuation or a recurrence of the problem
causing the initial admission. - Examples Patients discharged after coronary
angioplasty then readmitted for coronary bypass
grafts (CABG) patients discharged after an
admission for unexplained abdominal pain
readmitted to undergo an appendectomy - 5 Readmission for surgical procedure to address a
complication that may be related to or may have
resulted from care during the initial admission. - Example Patients readmitted for extensive
surgical debridement for a post-operative wound
infection
10Clinical Relation Reasons 6a, b and c
- 6 Readmissions for substance abuse and mental
health reasons. These readmissions are tallied
separately because of the uncertainty regarding
the hospital and outpatient teams ability to
prevent readmission. - 6a. Readmission for mental health reasons
following an initial admission for a non-mental
health, non-substance abuse reason - Example Initial admission for acute MI,
readmission for schizophrenia - 6b. Readmission for a substance abuse diagnosis
reason following an initial admission for a
non-mental health, non-substance abuse reason - Example Initial admission for pneumonia,
readmission for acute alcohol intoxication - 6c. Mental health or substance abuse
readmission following an initial admission for a
substance abuse or mental health diagnosis - Example A patient hospitalized for Bipolar
disorder, discharged than readmitted for cocaine
intoxication a patient discharged after a
hospitalization for acute alcohol toxicity,
readmitted for an exacerbation of schizophrenia.
The most common example in this category is a
patient admitted for schizophrenia and readmitted
for the same reason.
11Potentially Preventable Readmissions within 30
Days
All admissions 1,537,267
Readmissions within 30 days 186,605
Global Exclusions 24,164
Not Potentially Preventable 44,202
Total Exclusions 68,366
Potentially Preventable Readmissions 118,239
Percent of readmissions potentially preventable
118,239/186,605 63.4 Source MD HSCRC 2008-2009
12(No Transcript)
13(No Transcript)