Abstract

Despite recommendations, few have reported on quality improvement initiatives to implement length of rehabilitation stay benchmarks, while actively monitoring functional outcomes. This article describes the development, implementation, and evaluation of a precision case management model across all inpatient rehabilitation client groups in a Canadian facility. To develop the length of rehabilitation-stay (LoRS) benchmarks, patient data was retrospectively analyzed. A severity specific method was used to stratify median length of stay. A target reduction on 8.6 days in LoRS was established. Functional discharge targets were also set and monitored at specific intervals via the Functional Independence Measure (FIM®). The implementation used an incremental quality improvement phased approach. Following 12-months, a statistically significant reduction in mean LoRS of 13.2 days was achieved, along with a small increase in FIM® change across all rehabilitation client groups. A similar pattern was seen across the three main client groups, where a LoRS reduction greater than the target was achieved, along with important improvements in LoRS efficiency. This study demonstrates how the implementation of a precision case management model can assist a facility in markedly reducing LoRS across inpatient groups, without compromising functional change or community discharge rates and begin its transformation to a value-based organization.

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