Abstract

BackgroundUnderstanding the provision of health services to community-dwelling older adults is of great importance due to regulatory changes within post-acute care. The aim of this study was to illustrate pathways by which older adults, within an innovative post-acute care delivery model, move to either independence or re-admission back into higher levels of care to maximize the value of rehabilitation delivery.MethodsClinical data specific to an episode of care (n = 30,001) provided to Medicare beneficiaries treated via a rehabilitation house-calls model of care in their homes and senior living communites were separated into training and test sets. Classification trees were fit on the training set’s administrative and clinical variables. Descriptive statistics were calculated for the overall sample, patient characteristics, clinical characteristics, and clinical outcomes.ResultsSubjects were 83.3 years on average, 69.4% were female, and 62.2% were seen in their own homes while 37.8% were in senior living. The key variables predictive of progressing to independence were total number of visits, the presence of the Patient Specific Functional Scale (PSFS), PSFS score at discharge and change in PSFS. Prediction accuracy of the classification tree on the test set was 82.4%.ConclusionsOlder adults progress to a higher degree of independence, instead of higher levels of care, via several distinct pathways within a rehabilitation house-calls model of care. A mix of service utilization and outcome variables are key predictors of each pathway and may be used to maximize the value of service delivery. Further examination of the predictors of outcome using administrative datasets drawn from different sub-sets of older adults across the post-acute care continuum is warranted.

Highlights

  • Understanding the provision of health services to community-dwelling older adults is of great importance due to regulatory changes within post-acute care

  • We found that 63% of patients fell into two highly predictive terminal nodes (4 and 15) determined entirely by their number of visits and Patient Specific Functional Scale (PSFS) score

  • Our intention was to fit a model that would predict progression to independence from therapy, our findings provide insight into factors that influence the risk of re-admission back into higher levels of care including the hospital, home health, and hospice

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding the provision of health services to community-dwelling older adults is of great importance due to regulatory changes within post-acute care. The aim of this study was to illustrate pathways by which older adults, within an innovative post-acute care delivery model, move to either independence or re-admission back into higher levels of care to maximize the value of rehabilitation delivery. A rapidly aging United States population is magnifying concern over value in healthcare. The Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPac), an agency that provides non-partisan analysis of the United States (US) Medicare program, has long expressed concern that Medicare Part A home health agencies (HHA) “target therapy visit thresholds used to adjust payment... The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), the agency that oversees the Medicare system, introduced the Patient-Driven Groupings Model (PDGM) which will change home health payment in two primary ways beginning in 2020.

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