Title: 30-Day Psychiatric Readmissions: Rates, Reasons, Responses
130-Day Psychiatric Readmissions Rates, Reasons,
Responses
- Jane Hamilton, Ph.D.
- Postdoctoral Research Fellow
- The University of Texas Medical School at Houston
- Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
- Harris County Psychiatric Center (HCPC)
2Why Examine 30-Day Psychiatric Readmissions?
- Health care reform established the goal of
reducing 30-day readmissions across medical
conditions - Increased interest in 30-day psychiatric
readmission rates as quality indicators - Internationally accepted indicator of the quality
of inpatient care as well as the transition to
community-based care after discharge
3Report Objectives
- Review peer-reviewed articles for rates,
determinants, and strategies for reducing 30-day
psychiatric readmissions - Synthesize evidence into a behavioral health
report that will be disseminated to the Houston
community
4Review Methods
- Electronic searches of MEDLINE and PubMed
- Follow-up searches of cited articles
- Google searches for rates and best practices
- Examination of bests practice interventions
implemented in other states - Key Words Hospitals, Psychiatric, Patient
Readmission, Rehospitalization, Interventions,
Reduction, 30-Day
5Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria
- Inclusion Original research and systematic
reviews (published from 1996 to 2014) examining
predictors of psychiatric readmission and/or
interventions to reduce psychiatric readmission - Exclusion Studies examining readmissions in
acute care hospitals, involving children and
adolescents, in languages other than English
6Rates of Readmission
Population Region Year 30-Day Readmission Rate
Medicaid Patients (Overall) U.S. 2007 10.7
Medicaid Patients (Mental Health Diagnosis) U.S. 2007 11.8
Medicaid Patients (Substance Abuse Diagnosis) U.S. 2007 13.0
Medicare Psychiatric Patients U.S. 2007 15.0
Psychiatric Hospital Patients (Excluding State Hospitals) Texas 2012 11.2
7(No Transcript)
8Demographic Factors
- Male Gender
- Young Age
- Divorced or Unmarried
- Unemployed
- Low-income or Receiving Public Assistance
9Clinical Factors
- Diagnosis of a Psychotic Illness
- Substance Abuse and/or Dependence
- Co-occurring Personality Disorders
- Suicidal Ideation, Suicide Plans, or Suicide Risk
- Patient Severity (measured by psychometric scales
or by clinician assessment)
10Treatment Factors
- Number of Previous Psychiatric Hospitalizations
- Shown across studies to be a reliable predictor
- Medication Non-Adherence After Discharge
- 7 studies found a significant relationship
- Length of Stay (LOS) During the Previous
Admission - The effect of LOS has been inconsistent across
studies - Longer LOS may reflect patient severity
11Community Factors
- Aftercare and Follow-up Arrangements
- No Scheduled Aftercare Appointment
- Not Having the Discharge Plan Sent to Aftercare
Providers - Limited Contact with Aftercare Providers
- Patients Living Conditions after Discharge
- Residential Instability or Homelessness
- Living with Parents
- Need for Relief from Caregiving Responsibilities
12Readmission Risk Factor Clusters
- Young males diagnosed with Schizophrenia with
prior hospitalizations (Appleby et al., 1993
1996) - Patients diagnosed with Major Depressive Disorder
with co-occurring substance abuse and/or
personality disorders (Lin et al., 2007) - Patient-reported anxiety symptoms, elevated
depression scores, and the number of previous
hospitalizations (Averill et al., 2001)
13Strategies to Reduce Readmission
- Medication Practices
- Engagement in Outpatient Services
- Inpatient Clinical Interventions
14Long-Acting Injectables Depot Medications
- Used to Treat Patients with Schizophrenia and
Other Psychotic Disorders - Provides More Predictable and Stable Serum
Concentrations of the Active Drug - May Improve Overall Rates of Treatment Adherence
- May Improve Early Detection and Prevention of
Relapse - May Reduce Readmission Rates
15Clozapine
- Gold Standard Treatment for Schizophrenia
- Underutilized - only used with 10-20 of patients
with approved indications (Meltzer, 2012) - Primary indications
- Treatment-resistant Schizophrenia or
Schizoaffective Disorder - Patients with Schizophrenia or Schizoaffective
Disorder who are at high risk for suicide - Safety concerns may cause underutilization
- Increased awareness of risks and benefits
recommended - Hospital-based study found discharged patients
who received Clozapine were less likely to be
readmitted (Essock et al., 1996)
16Medication Best Practices
- Medication Reconciliation Process of comparing a
patient's medication orders to all of the
medications that the patient has been taking - To avoid medication errors such as omissions,
duplications, dosing errors, or drug interactions - Done at every care transition
- Multiple members of the treatment team should
participate - Medication Fill and Counseling at Discharge
- A recent study found that discharged patients
provided with filled psychiatric prescriptions
and medication counseling from the pharmacist
were significantly less likely to be readmitted
(Tomko et al., 2013)
17Outpatient Engagement Quarterly Data Sharing and
Case Reviews
- State-wide program implemented by Amerigroup
Florida to improve the transition to outpatient
care and reduce readmissions - 7 psychiatric hospitals with high readmission
rates and costs participated - Strategies included
- Quarterly meetings to review admissions and LOS
data - Case reviews
- Facilitation of appropriate treatment and support
services after discharge - Readmissions reduced from 17.7 (2008 ) to 10.4
-10.9 (2011)
18Transitional Care Model
- Pilot intervention designed to improve
communication between settings and increase
patient and family effectiveness in navigating
the health care system (Batscha et al., 2011) - Intervention components
- Pre-discharge transition interview
- Appointment reminder letter
- Brief meeting at the first post-discharge
appointment - Twelve (92) of 13 patients attended the
post-discharge appointment compared with the
previous rate of 44
19Assertive Community Treatment
- Evidence-based practice model (developed in 1980,
extensively evaluated) - Multidisciplinary team provides treatment,
rehabilitation, and support services for
individuals with severe mental illness - High fidelity models found to reduce
hospitalization by 58 compared to case
management interventions (Latimer, 1999) - 1.4 of clients served within the Texas mental
health system participated in 2012 (SAMHSA, 2012)
20Intensive Case Management (ICM)
- A Retrospective study of 164 clients found ICM
was associated with fewer readmissions and longer
community tenure compared to case management
(Kuno et al., 1999) - A Cochrane Review (2010) reported that ICM
reduced hospitalizations and increased engagement
in outpatient care compared to treatment as
usual, particularly for individuals with multiple
readmissions
21Assisted Outpatient Treatment (AOT)
- Court-ordered program designed to improve
outcomes for persons - With serious mental illness
- Multiple psychiatric hospitalizations
- Non-adherence with outpatient care
- An AOT evaluation found that a substantial
investment of state resources was required
upfront, but it reduced the overall service costs
for persons with serious mental illness (Swanson
et al., 2013) - Participation in AOT associated with
- Reduced LOS
- Increased receipt of services (medication and
ICM) - Greater engagement in outpatient services (Swartz
et al., 2010)
22Peer to Peer Services
- Clients randomized to a peer mentorship program
had significantly fewer readmissions and fewer
hospital days than those in usual care at 9-month
follow-up post-discharge (Sledge et al., 2011) - A longitudinal comparison of clients with
co-occurring substance use disorders and mental
illness found those who participated in a peer
support program had higher community tenure and
lower readmissions than clients in a comparison
group (Min, 2007)
23Other Clinical Interventions
- Motivational Interviewing (MI)
- Randomized trial of 121 psychiatric inpatients
found that adding a 1-hour MI session prior to
discharge was associated with attendance at the
first outpatient appointment compared to
treatment as usual (Swanson, 1999) - Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
- Manualized CBT group therapy was introduced on an
inpatient unit and was associated with
significant reductions in readmissions (from 38
to 24) for patients with schizophrenia and
bipolar disorder (Veltro, 2008)
24Discussion
- Please share your successes/challenges with any
of the strategies presented today. - Thank you!
25Acknowledgements
- Report Co-Authors
- Charles Begley, Ph.D.(Postdoctoral Co-mentor _at_
UTSPH) - Juan Galvez, M.D. (UT Psychiatry Postdoctoral
Research Fellow) - Sponsor
- Jair Soares, M.D., Ph.D. (Postdoctoral Mentor)
- Department Chair, UT Medical School Department of
Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Executive
Director of Harris County Psychiatric Center