Impact of the Hospital Readmission Reduction Program on Surgical Readmissions Among Medicare Beneficiaries

Objective: To understand the impact of the Hospital Readmission Reduction Program on both future targeted and nontargeted surgical procedures. Background: The Hospital Readmission Reduction Program, established under the Affordable Care Act in March of 2010, placed financial penalties on hospitals with higher than expected rates of readmission beginning in 2012 for targeted medical conditions. Multiple studies have suggested a “spill-over” effect into other conditions, but the extent of that effect for specific surgical procedures is unknown. Methods: A retrospective review 5,122,240 Medicare beneficiaries who underwent future targeted procedures (total hip replacement, total knee replacements) or nontargeted procedures (colectomy, lung resection, abdominal aortic aneurysm repair, coronary artery bypass graft, aortic valve replacement, mitral valve repair) using an interrupted time series model to assess the rates of readmission before the Hospital Readmission Reduction Program was announced (2008–2010), whereas the program was being implemented (2010–2012) and after penalties were initiated (2012–2014). We also explored if the change in readmission rates were correlated with changes in index length of stay, use of observation status, or discharge to a skilled nursing facility. Results: From 2008 to 2014 rates of readmission declined for both target conditions (6.8%–4.8%; slope change −0.07 to −0.10, P
Source: Annals of Surgery - Category: Surgery Tags: Papers of the 137Th ASA Annual Meeting Source Type: research