The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Patient care prompts penalties

Judgment goes against 764 facilities, including 21 hospitals in Georgia.

- By Andy Miller Georgia Health News Andy Miller is editor of Georgia Health News.

Medicare has penalized 21 Georgia hospitals for having the highest rates of patient infections and potentiall­y avoidable complicati­ons.

That’s up slightly from the 18 hospitals in the state that drew penalties in the last round of federal assessment­s.

For the penalized hospitals, Medicare payments are being reduced by 1% for each bill from October 2021 through September.

The hospitals getting penalized include large facilities in metro Atlanta, Augusta, Macon and Columbus, and some serving smaller cities.

Overall, 764 hospitals drew the punishment­s. Among them are more than three dozen that Medicare’s Care Compare — run by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services — simultaneo­usly rates as among the best in the country, Kaiser Health News reported.

None of those with conflictin­g evaluation­s is in Georgia.

The penalties are based on the experience­s of Medicare patients discharged from the hospital between July 2018 and the end of 2019, before the pandemic began.

To look up a hospital, go to https://khn.org/news/hospital-penalties/

On any given day, one in every 31 hospital patients has an infection contracted during their stay, according to the centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Infections and other complicati­ons can prolong hospital stays, complicate treatments and, in the worst instances, kill patients.

The punishment­s, which the 2010 Affordable Care Act requires to be assessed on the worst-performing 25% of general hospitals each year, are intended to make hospitals focus on reducing bedsores, hip fractures, blood clots and the cohort of infections­that before COVID-19 were the biggest scourges in hospitals. Those include surgical infections, urinary tract infections from catheters and antibiotic-resistant germs, such as MRSA.

Eight years into thehospita­l-acquired Condition Reduction Program, 2,046 hospitals have been penalized at least once, a KHN analysis shows. But researcher­s have found little evidence the penalties are getting hospitals to improve their efforts to prevent bedsores, falls, infections and other harm to patients.

“Unfortunat­ely, pretty much in every regard, the program has been a failure,” said Andrew Ryan, a professor of health care management at the University of Michigan’s School of Public Health who has published extensivel­y on the program.

“It’s very hard to capture patient safety with the surveillan­ce methods we currently have,” he told KHN. One problem, he added, is “you’re kind of asking hospitals to call out events that are going to have them lose money, so the incentives are really messed up for hospitals to fully disclose” patient injuries. Academic medical centers say the reason nearly half of them are penalized each year is that they are more diligent than other types of hospitals in finding and reporting infections.

A no th e r issue raised by researcher­s and the hospital industry is that, under the law, CMS each year must punish the quarter of general care hospitals with the highest rates of patient safety issues even if they have improved and even if their infection and complicati­on rates are infinitesi­mally different from those of some non-penalized hospitals.

CMS noted in a statement it had limited ability to alter the program. “CMS is committed to ensuring safety and quality of care for hospital patients through a variety of initiative­s,” the agency said. “Much of how the Hospital-acquired Condition (HAC) Reduction Program is structured, including penalty amounts, is determined by law.”

In developing the penalties, CMS evaluated 3,124 general acute hospitals. Exempted from the evaluation are about 2,000 hospitals. Many of those are critical access hospitals, which are the only hospitals serving a geographic — often rural — area. The law also excuses hospitals that focus on rehabilita­tion, long-term care, psychiatry, children’s care or veterans’ care.

The KHN analysis found that the government penalized 38 of the 404 hospitals that were both included in the hospital-acquired conditions evaluation and had received five stars for “overall quality,” which CMS calculates by using dozens of metrics. Those include not just infection and complicati­on rates but also death rates, readmissio­n frequency, ratings that patients give the hospital after discharge and hospitals’ consistenc­y in following basic protocols in a timely manner, such as giving patients medicine to break up blood clots in the 30 minutes after they display symptoms of potential heart attacks.

Additional­ly, 138 of 814 hospitals with the rating of four stars were docked by the program, KHN found.

Lower-rated hospitals were penalized with a higher frequency: Although just 9% of five-star hospitals were punished, 67% of onestar hospitals were.

KHN’S analysis found major discrepanc­ies between the list of penalized hospitals and how Medicare’s Care Compare rated them for virtually the same patient safety infection rates and conditions.

 ?? CHUCK HAMLIN ?? Medicare penalizes hospitals with the highest rates of patient infections and other complicati­ons, but research suggests the HAC Reduction Program may not result in improved efforts.
CHUCK HAMLIN Medicare penalizes hospitals with the highest rates of patient infections and other complicati­ons, but research suggests the HAC Reduction Program may not result in improved efforts.

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