Telegram & Gazette

Hospitals: Patient backup to worsen

More to be stuck at acute-care center before moving to nursing or rehab site

- Alison Kuznitz

The hefty backlog of patients waiting to be discharged from hospitals and transferre­d to other treatment settings is expected to grow this winter, health leaders warned Monday.

About 750 patients were stuck in acute or post-acute care hospitals on any given day in November as they waited to receive additional care at skilled nursing or rehabilita­tion facilities, as well as from home health agencies, according to the latest throughput report from the Massachuse­tts Health and Hospital Associatio­n. Just over 200 patients waited 30 days or longer to be discharged to a skilled nursing facility, MHA said.

“Based on data trends, the backups are expected to worsen in the coming months,” the Massachuse­tts Health and Hospital Associatio­n wrote in its weekly newsletter. “The December 2022 to March 2023 winter totals, taken from a smaller sample of hospitals during the height of flu/COVID/RSV season, showed the numbers of patients stuck in acute hospitals beds totaling more than 1,000 per month.”

State public health data shows that about 16% of the roughly 67,200 emergency department visits from Dec. 10 to

Dec. 16 were tied to acute respirator­y disease.

The hospital backlogs are caused by obstacles including administra­tive barriers from insurance companies, inadequate insurance coverage and staffing and capacity constraint­s at post-acute care facilities, the Massachuse­tts Health and Hospital Associatio­n said.

The associatio­n described the backups as a “persistent problem” in the state’s health care system that “remains unresolved,” even as hospitals try to find solutions like coordinati­ng admissions with skilled nursing facilities over the weekends.

“Hospitals and their partners across the post-acute care continuum are also strengthen­ing hospital-to-home programs, seeking additional reimbursem­ent for MassHealth patients who need specialize­d post-acute care, addressing the challenges of patients with psychiatri­c diagnoses who require skilled nursing facility care, and working to highlight the need to recruit more individual­s to serve in roles of guardians and conservato­rs for patients who require assistance with decision-making needs,” the Massachuse­tts Health and Hospital Associatio­n said. “Caregiver shortages are also a great problem that the healthcare system hopes to further address in 2024.”

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