Introduction: Creating and implementing programs aimed at reducing readmissions for high-risk patients is critical to demonstrate quality and avoid financial penalties. Intensive, multidisciplinary interventions providing care to high-risk patients utilizing telehealth have not been explored in the literature. This study seeks to explain the quality improvement process, structure, intervention, lessons learned, and early outcomes of such a program.
Methods: Patients were identified prior to discharge with a multicomponent risk score. The enrolled population was managed intensively for 30 days after discharge through a suite of services, including weekly video visits with an advanced practice provider, pharmacist, and home nurse; regular lab monitoring; telemonitoring of vital signs; and intensive home health visits. The process was iterative, including a successful pilot phase followed by an expanded health system-wide intervention analyzing multiple outcomes including satisfaction with video visits, self-rated improvement in health, and readmissions compared to matched populations.
Results: The expanded program resulted in improvements in self-reported health (68.9% reported health was some or greatly improved) and high satisfaction with video visits (89% rated satisfaction with video visits 8-10). Thirty-day readmissions were reduced compared to individuals with similar readmission risk scores discharged from the same hospital (18.3% vs 31.1%) and individuals who declined to participate in the program (18.3% vs 26.4%).
Conclusions: This novel model using telehealth to provide intensive, multidisciplinary care to high-risk patients has been successfully developed and deployed. Key areas for growth and exploration include developing an intervention that captures a greater percentage of discharged high-risk patients, including non-homebound patients, improving the electronic interface with home health care, and reducing costs while serving more patients. Data show that the intervention results in high patient satisfaction, improvements in self-reported health, and preliminary data showing reductions in readmission rates.
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Med Oral Patol Oral Cir Bucal
January 2025
Hospital Universitario "Dr. José Eleuterio González" Av. Dr. José Eleuterio González 235, Mitras Centro 64460 Monterrey, Mexico
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January 2025
Division of Cardiovascular Surgery, Temple University Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. USA.
Infective endocarditis carries a high risk of morbidity and mortality with recurrent infections and non-compliance. In the case of right-sided endocarditis, the indications for intervention are less clear. The Angiovac procedure provides a treatment for right-sided endocarditis that is a less-invasive and ideal for a complicated patient population.
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January 2025
Thoracic surgeon, Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico, Milano, Italy.
The use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) in surgery is expanding as the medical community started adopting it, with good results, for procedures with high risk of respiratory and hemodynamic instability. This technique provided the possibility to reduce the number of patients previously considered inoperable because of these limitations. Thymic epithelial tumors (TETs) are rare neoplastic mediastinal lesions, with a reported incidence of 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Case Rep
January 2025
Department of Dermatology and Venereology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Aleppo, Aleppo, Syria.
Background: Basal cell nevus syndrome, also known as Gorlin or Gorlin-Goltz syndrome, is a hereditary condition caused by mutation in the PATCHED gene. The syndrome presents with a wide range of clinical manifestations, including basal cell carcinomas, jaw cysts, and skeletal anomalies. Diagnosis is based on specific criteria, and treatment typically includes surgical removal of basal cell carcinomas.
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