Abstract

Hospital readmissions are common and often preventable, leading to unnecessary burden on patients, families, and the health care system. The purpose of this descriptive communication is to share the impact of an interdisciplinary, outpatient clinic-based care transition intervention on clinical, organizational, and financial outcomes. Compared to usual care, the care transition intervention decreased the median time to Internal Medicine Clinic (IMC) or any clinic follow-up visit by 5 and 4 days, respectively. By including a pharmacist in the hospital follow-up visit, the program significantly reduced all-cause 30-day hospital readmission rates (9% versus 26% in usual care) and the composite endpoint of 30-day health care utilization, which is defined as readmission and emergency department (ED) rates (19% versus 44% usual care). Over the course of one year, this program can prevent 102 30-day hospital readmissions with an estimated cost reduction of $1,113,000 per year. The pharmacist at the IMC collaborated with the Family Medicine Clinic (FMC) pharmacist to standardize practices. In the FMC, the hospital readmission rate was 6.5% for patients seen by a clinic-based pharmacist within 30 days of discharge compared to 20% for those not seen by a pharmacist. This transitions intervention demonstrated a consistent and recognizable contribution from pharmacists providing direct patient care and practicing in the ambulatory care primary care settings that has been replicated across clinics at our academic medical center.

Highlights

  • Health care reform is placing an emphasis on improving the quality of care delivered to our patients

  • Our project’s purpose was to (1) develop an interdisciplinary, outpatient clinic-based care transition intervention aimed at reducing 30-day hospital readmission rates; (2) examine the impact of this intervention on clinical, organizational, and financial outcomes; and (3) describe the role of the pharmacist and the significance of this program to pharmacy practice advancement

  • The high readmission rate demonstrated for Internal Medicine Clinic (IMC) patients, coupled with the financial implications to our institution, served as the justification for providing the critical support needed to further develop an intervention aimed at reducing 30-day hospital readmission rates

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Summary

Introduction

Health care reform is placing an emphasis on improving the quality of care delivered to our patients. There is a critical need for health care institutions to identify outpatient pharmacy best practices for improving the care transition of patients from the inpatient to ambulatory care environment. This supports many of the key findings from the American Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP) Foundation Ambulatory Conference and Summit Consensus Recommendations [15]. Our project’s purpose was to (1) develop an interdisciplinary, outpatient clinic-based care transition intervention aimed at reducing 30-day hospital readmission rates; (2) examine the impact of this intervention on clinical, organizational, and financial outcomes; and (3) describe the role of the pharmacist and the significance of this program to pharmacy practice advancement

Environmental Scan
Program Development
Program Implementation
Coordination with Other Disciplines
Continuous Quality Improvement
Demonstration of Improvements
Standardization of Visit Content
Identification of Medication-Related Problems
Decreased Time to Hospital Follow-up
Reduction of Readmission Rates and ED Visits
Estimated Cost-Savings through Avoided Readmissions
Significance of the Program to Pharmacy Practice Advancement
Coordination with Additional Outpatient Clinics
Coordination with Health Care System Initiatives
Findings
Conclusions
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