The Boston Globe

Backlog of patients expected to grow

Woes persist at skilled-care sites

- By 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 are warning.

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 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, the associatio­n said.

“Based on data trends, the backups are expected to worsen in the coming months,” the 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 show that about 16 percent of the roughly 67,200 emergency department visits from Dec. 10-16 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 postacute care facilities, the associatio­n said.

The group described the backups as a persistent problem, even as hospitals try to find solutions including 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 . . . 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 associatio­n said.

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