The Heartbleed web security exploit was first publicized several weeks ago. In the time since…
Efforts to reduce hospital readmissions have been focused on a handful of diagnoses and on government payors (primarily Medicare). In order to get a handle on the roughly 15% of the U.S. health care spend that goes to readmissions, it is vital to have a better understanding of what these readmissions are for, who is experiencing them, and why. Not every readmission is a preventable readmission — though health reform wonks are pretty highly focused on preventable readmissions for specific diagnoses (starting with acute myocardial infarction, heart failure and pneumonia).
Here's the data from 2011, thanks to HCUP (the Healthcare Utilization and Cost Project) at AHRQ:
This statistical brief includes data on the top ten principal diagnoses for the original hospital stay, for each payor type, which is useful information to have at hand when discussing whether readmissions are preventable. We shouldn't be dinging hospitals for readmissions that are not preventable. Some situations are clear-cut; others are less so. Perhaps data sets like this will allow for more narrowly tailored policies and incentives to be developed in the future.
Conditions With the Largest Number of Adult Hospital Readmissions by Payer, 2011
David Harlow
The Harlow Group LLC
Health Care Law and Consulting
Healthcare NOW Radio Podcast Network · Harlow on Healthcare
In this episode I speak with Ryne Natzke, Chief Revenue Officer of TrustCommerce, a Sphere…
Natalie Davis, CEO of United States of Care, returned to Harlow on Healthcare to discuss…
If the EHR is the system of record, then Lumeon is the system of action.…
Blockchain in healthcare? Well, it can solve some problems. Have a listen to my conversation…
Joel Diamond, Chief Medical Officer at 2bPrecise, speaks with me about bringing genetic testing information…