AI Article Synopsis

  • Older adults often need skilled nursing care after hospitalization, either at home or in a facility, but discharge practices may be influenced by financial incentives rather than patient needs.
  • Hospitals are encouraged to quickly discharge frail patients to skilled nursing facilities, while these facilities may keep patients longer to maximize funding, leading to potential negative effects on health and finances.
  • Improving how patients transition from hospitals to skilled nursing involves understanding the factors behind admission decisions and can be enhanced through care management interventions, despite the current issues in healthcare reform.

Article Abstract

After hospitalization, many older adults require skilled nursing care. Although some patients receive services at home, others are admitted to a skilled nursing facility. In the current fragmented health care system, hospitals are financially incentivized to discharge frail older adults to a facility for postacute care as soon as possible. Similarly, many skilled nursing facilities are incentivized to extend the posthospitalization period of care and to transition the patient to custodial nursing home care. The resulting overuse of institution-based skilled nursing care may be associated with various adverse medical social and financial consequences. Care management interventions for more efficient and effective skilled nursing facility use must consider the determinants involved in the decisions to admit and maintain patients in skilled nursing facilities. As we await health care reform efforts that will address these barriers, opportunities already exist for care managers to improve the current postacute transition processes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1891/1521-0987.12.2.54DOI Listing

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