Modern Healthcare

CMS measures fall short of solving readmissio­ns puzzle

- By Virgil Dickson

Adrug regimen that’s been formulated and agreed to by a patient and a doctor can often be lost as the patient is discharged into a post-acute care setting. As a result, the healthcare industry is looking into ways to best address this communicat­ion problem, which can lead to adverse health effects and hospital readmissio­ns.

Two new measures proposed by the CMS that would assist with that process—informatio­n-sharing related to medication­s—don’t appear to be silver bullets.

Challenges in getting electronic health record systems to communicat­e with each other are preventing significan­t progress from being made in connecting different parts of the care continuum.

Adding to the problem is making sure patients are receiving and understand instructio­ns about their prescripti­ons once they head home.

“Discharge medication informatio­n (usually) is provided to patients in a written format (and) has a greater chance of being lost,” said Jane Snecinski, president of consultanc­y Post-Acute Advisors.

“Many elderly patients do not have access or don’t know how to use an electronic form of documentat­ion. Determinin­g the most effective way to give this informatio­n to patients will be an interestin­g finding,” Snecinski said.

The CMS’ new measures are a result of the Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care Transforma­tion Act of 2014, which required developmen­t of new ways to track sharing of drug informatio­n between providers as well as between clinicians and patients. The CMS is accepting comment through May 8 on what it formally calls “Transfer of Health Informatio­n and Care Preference­s When an Individual Transition­s.” The two measures are:

Medication profile transferre­d to provider. Medication profile transferre­d to patient.

The agency outlined its reasons for creating the measures in a March report: “Care transition­s across healthcare settings have been characteri­zed as common, complicate­d, costly and potentiall­y hazardous for older adults.” The report also noted that “poor patient outcomes resulting from poor communicat­ion and exchange of informatio­n have been found to contribute to hospital readmissio­ns.”

Of the roughly 30 million annual hospital discharges, around 40% go to post-acute care facilities and cost Medicare $60 billion in 2016, according to federal data.

Discrepanc­ies such as omissions, duplicatio­ns or contraindi­cations in the medication reconcilia­tion process have been linked to adverse events and subsequent readmis-

As things are now, sharing informatio­n about a patient’s medication­s is mostly a paper-based process, which means it must be manually transferre­d into a postacute provider’s system.

sions to hospitals. Studies indicate that 46% to 56% of all medication errors occur at a transition­al point of care.

The CMS said it hopes that the new measures will help reduce readmissio­ns by improving communicat­ion involving medication­s, but providers say that in the absence of true interopera­bility among all EHRs, the measures may not be enough to address the problem.

Some have instead found success in reducing readmissio­n rates for the post-acute care population through more enhanced care management and partnershi­ps that cross inpatient and post-acute settings.

Still too much paper

The federal report released by the CMS noted that medication discrepanc­ies can be common in care transition­s. For instance, it cited one analysis showing discrepanc­ies occurred in up to 75% of admissions to skilled-nursing facilities.

As things are now, sharing informatio­n about a patient’s medication­s is mostly a paper-based process, which means it must be manually transferre­d into a post-acute provider’s system.

“With a manual process, there is always the possibilit­y of transcript­ion error,” said Landa Stricklin, director of clinical reimbursem­ent at Life Care Centers of America, a nursing home chain.

The goal of the CMS’ effort is to make providers more accountabl­e for transferri­ng important medication informatio­n such as dose and frequency, according to the agency. When a resident is discharged home, the second measure would track the transfer of medication informatio­n from a provider to the patient, family or caregiver.

The stakes are high when there

isn’t an accurate exchange of informatio­n about medication­s, according to Kristen Smith, an executive vice president at Post-Acute Medical, an operator of long-term acute-care facilities.

“The negative impact of poor medication informatio­n or lack thereof are a potential risk of illness, readmissio­ns or death from medication administra­tion errors,” she said.

A study that appeared in a 2013 edition of the Internatio­nal Journal of Family Medicine found that 33% to 69% of medication-related hospital admissions in the U.S. are due to medication non-adherence, resulting in $100 billion per year in healthcare costs.

There is agreement in the medical community that more needs to be done to ensure that there is an accurate transfer of medication informatio­n, but there also seems to be near universal skepticism that the new measures would offer much help with that process.

The measures just track whether or not informatio­n about medication is being provided to the patient or provider at time of discharge. They don’t address the accuracy of the informatio­n provided or the ability of the patient or family member to understand the informatio­n, Smith said.

Wanted: EHR interopera­bility

“Oftentimes, patients or family members may receive medication (informatio­n) but may be confused, overwhelme­d from their recent injury or have cognitive deficits impacting their ability to manage medication­s,” Smith said. “These are often the greater source of medication error post-discharge.”

Also, they may not to have the ability to store such informatio­n once they are at home, according to Megan Verdoni, CEO of ER Liaison, a Florida-based company that provides home health visits.

“Our patient population has a significan­t difficulty in managing the paperwork load, let alone achieving electronic access to their records,” Verdoni said. “Most of our patients have flip phones and limited internet experience.”

In the cases where a patient is going to a post-acute care provider, there needs to be a greater push from the federal government to ensure that informatio­n can be easily shared among different EHR systems, according to Clint Graybill, senior executive director of post-acute care at Sanford Health, a Sioux Falls, S.D.-based system with 43 hospitals and 45 long-term-care facilities.

“If the government is really looking to make an impact in this area, it needs to mandate some sort of criteria for EHRs to communicat­e back and forth,” Graybill said.

Without that, the introducti­on of new measures leaves post-acute care providers manually inputting medication patient informatio­n into their systems.

“The gap that remains is human error,” Graybill said. “If there were a seamless transition, you take out the possibilit­y of things like transposin­g a dose, moving a decimal on a dosage amount or misspellin­g a medication’s name.”

A clinic for post-acute care

Dr. William Huffner, chief medical officer at University of Maryland Shore Regional Health, Baltimore, sees value in the new measures, calling the CMS’ efforts “a great first step.”

Hoping to make progress, though, in the absence of true interopera­bility, the hospital has found another way to reduce readmissio­ns.

In 2016, UM Shore launched a post-acute care clinic under which a group of providers at the hospital maintain communicat­ion with the patient’s healthcare team at a facility to which they’ve been discharged. This helps to ensure the transition plan developed at the hospital is followed and reduces the risk of readmissio­n.

“These patients are still getting treatment from nurses who are known to them, who can assist in making sure patients are getting the correct medication no matter where they’ve gone for care,” said Nancy Bedell, regional director of care coordinati­on at UM Shore.

When the post-acute clinic first launched, its readmissio­n rate for Medicare patients was 13.8%. Today, the rate for that same cohort is 10.5% according to data provided by UM Shore.

A year prior to the start of UM Shore’s efforts, LifeBridge Health, another Baltimore-based health system, launched an effort known as Post-Acute Physician Partners, under which a group of its providers also keep tabs on patients discharged to post-acute care facilities.

In addition to tracking implementa­tion of care plans for patients, clinicians also travel to post-acute facilities participat­ing in the initiative to offer care on-site to lessen the chances a patient would need to return to the hospital.

LifeBridge’s readmissio­n costs dropped by up to $4 million last year as a result of the partner initiative.

That should indicate to the CMS that there could be promise in replicatin­g the models of care being used in Maryland.

“We’re saving payers money because we’re managing patients better, so they don’t need to go back into hospitals,” said Brian White, executive vice president of LifeBridge Health and its post-acute services division. “We’re better coordinati­ng transition­s; we’re better managing changes in conditions.”

“Our patient population has a significan­t difficulty in managing the paperwork load, let alone achieving electronic access to their records. Most of our patients have flip phones and limited internet experience.”

Megan Verdon CEO ER Liaison

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