The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

CT hospitals penalized for high readmissio­n rates

- By Cara Rosner

Most Connecticu­t hospitals will lose some of their Medicare reimbursem­ent payments over the next year as penalties for having too many readmitted patients, according to new data from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Statewide, 25 of the hospitals evaluated – or 89 percent – will have reimbursem­ents reduced, to varying degrees, in the 2021 fiscal year that started Oct. 1, according to a

Kaiser Health News analysis of CMS data.

Nationwide, almost half of hospitals, or 2,545 of them, will have their Medicare reimbursem­ents cut, according to Kaiser Health News. The latest penalties were calculated using data from June 2016 through June 2019, meaning the influx of patients to hospitals seen amid the pandemic didn’t factor in.

CMS has been imposing reimbursem­ent reductions since the 2013 fiscal year, to penalize hospitals that have high rates of patients who are readmitted within one month of being discharged. The penalties were enacted under the Affordable Care Act.

This year’s penalties come as many hospitals already face financial hardship from the pandemic.

“We’re not really sure why they (CMS) chose to still go through with the readmissio­n criteria,” said Dr. Mary Cooper, chief quality officer and senior vice president for clinical affairs at the Connecticu­t Hospital Associatio­n/ Levying penalties at this time “feels insensitiv­e” as hospitals continue to be front-line responders to the COVID-19 crisis, she said.

But hospitals continuous­ly are working to improve readmissio­ns rates, Cooper said.

“We always want to make it better,” she said.

In partnershi­p with Unite Us and United Way’s 2-1-1 informatio­n line, the hospital associatio­n this year began rolling out programs that connect hospitals with community-based organizati­ons, with the goal of

improving care coordinati­on, Cooper said. Hospitals are being given tools that help them assess “other factors that may be affecting their [patients’] health outcomes,” she said, such as social, economic and genetic factors.

The program makes it easier to refer patients to organizati­ons such as food pantries, housing agencies, transporta­tion authoritie­s and other services that can affect patients’ health outcomes once they leave the hospital, Cooper said. Those agencies also can report back to the hospitals.

“This year, more than ever, there’s been such a need for it,” she said. “The

hospitals were just so happy to implement that; we have tremendous buyin. We’ve never had access to that kind of closed-loop referral before.”

So far, about one third of hospitals statewide are part of the program, and it is slated to be implemente­d at all hospitals by the end of 2021, Cooper said. These efforts, though, likely won’t be reflected in readmissio­ns data for a few years, she added.

This year, no Connecticu­t hospitals received the maximum penalty rate of 3 percent, but three will lose more than 2 percent of their Medicare reimbursem­ents. They are: Manchester Memorial Hospital, at 2.89 percent Bridgeport Hospital, at 2.62 percent; and Rockville General Hospital, at 2.02

percent.

Most hospitals in the state – 20 of them – are losing less than 1 percent of their reimbursem­ents. They include: Danbury Hospital at 0.39 percent, Norwalk Hospital at 0.92 percent, Greenwich Hospital at 0.79 percent, St. Vincent’s Medical Center in Bridgeport at 0.72 percent, Griffin Hospital in Derby at 0.33 percent, Middlesex Hospital at 0.88 percent, and Charlotte Hungerford Hospital in Torrington at 0.36 percent.

Stamford Hospital, which for two years in a row was not penalized, will see a 0.07 percent reduction.

Among the state’s largest hospitals, Hartford Hospital is losing 0.90 percent of its reimbursem­ent, Yale New Haven

Hospital, 0.70 percent and St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center, 0.50 percent.

Three hospitals received no penalty: Hebrew Home and Hospital Inc. in West Hartford, Masonicare Health Center in Wallingfor­d, and Sharon Hospital.

Since the program’s inception, most Connecticu­t hospitals have gotten penalties each year.

“It always concerns me when we have a situation where it’s same story, different year; and that’s what’s we’re having here,” said Lisa Freeman, executive director of the Connecticu­t Center for Patient Safety.

That shows, she said, that the penalties aren’t having the intended effect of reducing admissions in a meaningful way. Many

hospitals are likely just budgeting the penalties into their cost of doing business, she said.

Some hospitals are making strides, but others have a long way to go, Freeman said. A big part of the problem, she said, is poor coordinati­on of care once patients leave the hospital. Ensuring patients have access to doctors for follow-up visits, can get to a pharmacy to fill prescripti­ons, and are connected to other services they need, for instance, should be considered upon discharge, she said.

“It really does concern me,” she said. “It’s something that we absolutely have to attend to. Right now, the system is not set up to support the kind of coordinati­on that’s needed.

We’re just not thinking the process through, and therefore we’re setting up to fail.”

Eight Connecticu­t hospitals are exempt from the program. They are: Connecticu­t Children’s Medical Center in Hartford, Connecticu­t Valley Hospital in Middletown, Natchaug Hospital in Mansfield, Connecticu­t Mental Health Center in New Haven, Southwest Connecticu­t Mental Health in Bridgeport, Silver Hill Hospital Inc. in New Canaan, the Connecticu­t Hospice Inc. in Branford, and Albert J. Solnit Children’s Center in Middletown.

This story was reported under a partnershi­p with the Connecticu­t Health I-Team (c-hit.org), a nonprofit news organizati­on dedicated to health reporting. it

 ?? Peter Hvizdak / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Yale New Haven Hospital
Peter Hvizdak / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Yale New Haven Hospital

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