Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Promising medical study fails stunningly

- By Marilynn Marchione

Researcher­s thought they had a way to keep hard-totreat patients from constantly returning to the hospital and racking up big medical bills.

Health workers visited homes, went along to doctor appointmen­ts, made sure medicines were available and tackled social problems, including homelessne­ss, addiction and mental health issues.

Readmissio­ns seemed to drop. The program looked so promising that the federal government and the MacArthur Foundation gave big bucks to expand it.

But a more robust study released this month revealed it was a stunning failure on its main goal: Readmissio­n rates did decline, but by the same amount as for a comparison group of similar patients not in the costly program.

“There’s real concern that the response to this would be to just throw up our arms” and say nothing can be done to help these socalled frequent fliers of the medical system, said study leader Amy Finkelstei­n, of the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology and the National Bureau of Economic Research.

Federal grants and research groups at MIT paid for the study, which was published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Just 5% of the U.S. population accounts for half of health care spending, and hospitaliz­ation is a big part.

A decade ago, Dr. Jeff Brenner started working with hospitals in Camden, New Jersey, a city with high poverty and crime rates, to identify people who go to hospitals frequently and target them with special services. He won a MacArthur genius grant for the work, and federal grants expanded the program to Aurora, Colorado; Kansas City, Missouri; Allentown, Pennsylvan­ia; and San Diego.

The government also paid for a study to see if it worked.

The study enrolled 800 hospitaliz­ed Camden patients with at least two other admissions in the previous six months and at least two of these conditions: homelessne­ss, drug use, a mental health problem, trouble accessing services, lack of social support or use of five or more medicines.

Half were given usual care when they left the hospital. The rest were enrolled in Brenner’s program with nurses, social workers and others coordinati­ng their care for three months. Patients received seven to eight home visits and nine phone calls on average. The effort cost about $5,000 per patient.

Six months later, the readmissio­n rate was 62% in both groups, and there was no difference in total health care spending.

However, two key goals of the program — a home visit and a trip to a health provider within a week of leaving the hospital — were met for only 28% of participan­ts. Homelessne­ss and lack of a telephone were big reasons.

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