Abstract

With declining use of institutional postacute care, more patients are going directly home after hospital discharge. The consequences on the amount of help needed at home after discharge are unknown. To estimate trends in the frequency and duration of receipt of help with activities of daily living (ADLs) among older adults discharged home. Repeated cross-sectional study of a national sample of community-dwelling older adults who returned home after hospital discharge from 2011 to 2017. Participants included respondents to National Health and Aging Trends Study (NHATS), an annual population-based, nationally representative survey of Medicare beneficiaries, who were 69 years or older and were discharged from an acute care hospital to home during the years of the study. A nationally representative sample was estimated using NHATS' analytic weights. Unweighted frequencies and weighted and unweighted percentages are reported. The analysis was conducted from September 2020 to October 2021. Discharge from an acute care hospitalization. Receipt of help with ADLs during the 3 months after hospital discharge. Of the 3591 survey participants who were discharged home from an acute care hospital during the study period, 53.3% were female, 54.8% were married or living with a partner, and the mean (SD) age was 78.5 (7.0) years. Of these, 1710 (44.1%) reported receiving help within 3 months of discharge. Compared with people not receiving help, those receiving help were older (mean [SD] years, 79.7 [7.5] years vs 77.6 [6.3] years), had worse self-rated health at baseline (47.1% with fair or poor health vs 26.5%) and were more likely to have dementia (21.8% vs 5.5%). The percentage of respondents who reported receiving help increased during the study period from 38.1% of hospital discharges in 2011 to 51.5% in 2017. For those who were independent in their ADLs before hospitalization, the percentage receiving help after discharge more than doubled over the study period increasing from 9.3% receiving help in 2011 to 31.8% in 2017. Among patients who did not receive Medicare-reimbursed home health, the percentage receiving help also increased from 22.1% to 28.1%. Among those who received help after discharge, the need for help slowly declined to prehospitalization levels over the ensuing 9 months. In this cross-sectional study, older adults' receipt of help at home after hospital discharge increased from 2011 to 2017, including patients relying on non-Medicare funded sources of care. As payers steer patients away from inpatient postacute care facilities, policymakers will need to pay attention to this shifting burden of care.

Highlights

  • Hospitalization for acute illness often results in functional declines for older adults, requiring a period of rehabilitation and recovery after hospital discharge

  • The percentage of respondents who reported receiving help increased during the study period from 38.1% of hospital discharges in 2011 to 51.5% in 2017

  • Among patients who did not receive Medicare-reimbursed home health, the percentage receiving help increased from 22.1% to 28.1%. Among those who received help after discharge, the need for help slowly declined to prehospitalization levels over the ensuing 9 months. In this cross-sectional study, older adults’ receipt of help at home after hospital discharge increased from 2011 to 2017, including patients relying on non-Medicare

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Summary

Introduction

Hospitalization for acute illness often results in functional declines for older adults, requiring a period of rehabilitation and recovery after hospital discharge. Home health care workers may provide some of this assistance, and the use of home health care after hospital discharge is common.[6] home health visits alone are insufficient to provide the frequent care that some older adults need. In these cases, care is often provided by unpaid caregivers,[7,8] usually family members or friends, at significant costs to the caregiver and the family.[9]

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