AI Article Synopsis

  • Accountable care organizations (ACOs) aim to enhance healthcare quality and lower costs for heart failure patients, but there’s limited understanding of admission rate variations across different ACOs.
  • A study of over 1.2 million heart failure patients revealed significant differences in acute admission rates among 467 ACOs, with a median of 87 admissions per 100 people, highlighting that 13% performed better while 14% performed worse than average.
  • ACOs that had better performance generally had fewer Black beneficiaries and were independent, while those that fared worse tended to be large, hospital-affiliated, and located in the Northeast with fewer primary care providers.

Article Abstract

Background Accountable care organizations (ACOs) aim to improve health care quality and reduce costs, including among patients with heart failure (HF). However, variation across ACOs in admission rates for patients with HF and associated factors are not well described. Methods and Results We identified Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries with HF who were assigned to a Medicare Shared Savings Program ACO in 2017 and survived ≥30 days into 2018. We calculated risk-standardized acute admission rates across ACOs, assigned ACOs to 1 of 3 performance categories, and examined associations between ACO characteristics and performance categories. Among 1 232 222 beneficiaries with HF, 283 795 (mean age, 81 years; 54% women; 86% White; 78% urban) were assigned to 1 of 467 Medicare Shared Savings Program ACOs. Across ACOs, the median risk-standardized acute admission rate was 87 admissions per 100 people, ranging from 61 (minimum) to 109 (maximum) admissions per 100 beneficiaries. Compared to the overall average, 13% of ACOs performed better on risk-standardized acute admission rates, 72% were no different, and 14% performed worse. Most ACOs with better performance had fewer Black beneficiaries and were not hospital affiliated. Most ACOs that performed worse than average were large, located in the Northeast, had a hospital affiliation, and had a lower proportion of primary care providers. Conclusions Admissions are common among beneficiaries with HF in ACOs, and there is variation in risk-standardized acute admission rates across ACOs. ACO performance was associated with certain ACO characteristics. Future studies should attempt to elucidate the relationship between ACO structure and characteristics and admission risk.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10356066PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.122.029758DOI Listing

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