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PROVIDING INPATIENT CARE BEYOND HOSPITAL WALLS: GEOGRAPHIC FACTORS IN ACUTE HOSPITAL CARE AT HOME WAIVER PROGRAMS

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ (CMS) Acute Hospital Care at Home waiver offers hospital-level reimbursement to provide acute hospital-level care in patients’ homes for the first time. While this initiative may make acute care at home more financially viable for health systems, it al...

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Autores principales: Franzosa, Emily, Gorbenko, Ksenia, Baim-Lance, Abigail, Schiller, Gabrielle, Wurtz, Heather, Masse, Sybil, Ornstein, Katherine, Leff, Bruce
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9765209/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.084
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author Franzosa, Emily
Gorbenko, Ksenia
Baim-Lance, Abigail
Schiller, Gabrielle
Wurtz, Heather
Masse, Sybil
Ornstein, Katherine
Leff, Bruce
author_facet Franzosa, Emily
Gorbenko, Ksenia
Baim-Lance, Abigail
Schiller, Gabrielle
Wurtz, Heather
Masse, Sybil
Ornstein, Katherine
Leff, Bruce
author_sort Franzosa, Emily
collection PubMed
description The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ (CMS) Acute Hospital Care at Home waiver offers hospital-level reimbursement to provide acute hospital-level care in patients’ homes for the first time. While this initiative may make acute care at home more financially viable for health systems, it also requires aligning Hospital at Home (HaH) operations with inpatient, rather than outpatient, regulatory requirements. We aimed to understand how participating HaH programs adapted to these requirements. We conducted semi-structured interviews with multiple leaders from 14 HaH waiver programs (n=18 clinical/medical, operational and program directors) varying in size, urbanicity, structure, and region, examining data through thematic analysis. Both urban and rural participants described geographic effects of waiver requirements. For instance, to ensure response to patient emergencies within 30 minutes, programs contracted with paramedic services to expand service areas, added program locations or moved primary locations to other system hubs. Programs maximized staff capacity across service areas by “leasing” staff from other home-based programs, focusing on urban hubs with more staff, balancing in-person visits with remote monitoring, and providing “hybrid” in-person/video appointments. However, travel time, length of acute care visits, staffing shortages, the need for new skills (e.g., acute care nurses, dietitians) and limited state scope of practice regulations, particularly for paramedics, limited the area and populations served. Adapting to waiver requirements required significant efforts to address staffing, logistical and regulatory challenges. Future waiver improvements should explicitly consider the unique resources needed to expand hospital-level care in geographically diverse ambulatory environments.
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spelling pubmed-97652092022-12-20 PROVIDING INPATIENT CARE BEYOND HOSPITAL WALLS: GEOGRAPHIC FACTORS IN ACUTE HOSPITAL CARE AT HOME WAIVER PROGRAMS Franzosa, Emily Gorbenko, Ksenia Baim-Lance, Abigail Schiller, Gabrielle Wurtz, Heather Masse, Sybil Ornstein, Katherine Leff, Bruce Innov Aging Abstracts The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ (CMS) Acute Hospital Care at Home waiver offers hospital-level reimbursement to provide acute hospital-level care in patients’ homes for the first time. While this initiative may make acute care at home more financially viable for health systems, it also requires aligning Hospital at Home (HaH) operations with inpatient, rather than outpatient, regulatory requirements. We aimed to understand how participating HaH programs adapted to these requirements. We conducted semi-structured interviews with multiple leaders from 14 HaH waiver programs (n=18 clinical/medical, operational and program directors) varying in size, urbanicity, structure, and region, examining data through thematic analysis. Both urban and rural participants described geographic effects of waiver requirements. For instance, to ensure response to patient emergencies within 30 minutes, programs contracted with paramedic services to expand service areas, added program locations or moved primary locations to other system hubs. Programs maximized staff capacity across service areas by “leasing” staff from other home-based programs, focusing on urban hubs with more staff, balancing in-person visits with remote monitoring, and providing “hybrid” in-person/video appointments. However, travel time, length of acute care visits, staffing shortages, the need for new skills (e.g., acute care nurses, dietitians) and limited state scope of practice regulations, particularly for paramedics, limited the area and populations served. Adapting to waiver requirements required significant efforts to address staffing, logistical and regulatory challenges. Future waiver improvements should explicitly consider the unique resources needed to expand hospital-level care in geographically diverse ambulatory environments. Oxford University Press 2022-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9765209/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.084 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Franzosa, Emily
Gorbenko, Ksenia
Baim-Lance, Abigail
Schiller, Gabrielle
Wurtz, Heather
Masse, Sybil
Ornstein, Katherine
Leff, Bruce
PROVIDING INPATIENT CARE BEYOND HOSPITAL WALLS: GEOGRAPHIC FACTORS IN ACUTE HOSPITAL CARE AT HOME WAIVER PROGRAMS
title PROVIDING INPATIENT CARE BEYOND HOSPITAL WALLS: GEOGRAPHIC FACTORS IN ACUTE HOSPITAL CARE AT HOME WAIVER PROGRAMS
title_full PROVIDING INPATIENT CARE BEYOND HOSPITAL WALLS: GEOGRAPHIC FACTORS IN ACUTE HOSPITAL CARE AT HOME WAIVER PROGRAMS
title_fullStr PROVIDING INPATIENT CARE BEYOND HOSPITAL WALLS: GEOGRAPHIC FACTORS IN ACUTE HOSPITAL CARE AT HOME WAIVER PROGRAMS
title_full_unstemmed PROVIDING INPATIENT CARE BEYOND HOSPITAL WALLS: GEOGRAPHIC FACTORS IN ACUTE HOSPITAL CARE AT HOME WAIVER PROGRAMS
title_short PROVIDING INPATIENT CARE BEYOND HOSPITAL WALLS: GEOGRAPHIC FACTORS IN ACUTE HOSPITAL CARE AT HOME WAIVER PROGRAMS
title_sort providing inpatient care beyond hospital walls: geographic factors in acute hospital care at home waiver programs
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9765209/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.084
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