For-profit hospital status and rehospitalizations at different hospitals: an analysis of Medicare data

Ann Intern Med. 2010 Dec 7;153(11):718-27. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-153-11-201012070-00005.

Abstract

Background: About one quarter of rehospitalized Medicare patients are admitted to hospitals different from their original hospital. The extent to which this practice is related to for-profit hospital status and affects payments and mortality is unknown.

Objective: To describe and examine predictors of and payments for rehospitalization at a different hospital among Medicare patients rehospitalized within 30 days at for-profit and nonprofit or public hospitals.

Design: Cohort study of patients discharged and rehospitalized from January 2005 to November 2006.

Setting: Medicare fee-for-service hospitals throughout the United States.

Participants: A 5% random national sample of Medicare patients with acute care rehospitalizations within 30 days of discharge (n = 74,564).

Measurements: 30-day rehospitalizations at different hospitals and total payments or mortality over the subsequent 30 days. Multivariate logistic and quantile regression models included index hospital for-profit status, discharge counts, geographic region, rural-urban commuting area, and teaching status; patient sociodemographic characteristics, disability status, and comorbid conditions; and a measure of risk adjustment.

Results: 16 622 patients (22%) in the sample were rehospitalized at a different hospital. Factors associated with increased risk for rehospitalization at a different hospital included index hospitalization at a for-profit, major medical school-affiliated, or low-volume hospital and having a Medicare-defined disability. Compared with patients rehospitalized at the same hospital, patients rehospitalized at different hospitals had higher adjusted 30-day total payments (median additional cost, $1308 per patient; P < 0.001) but no statistically significant differences in 30-day mortality, regardless of index hospital for-profit status.

Limitation: The database lacked detailed clinical information about patients and did not include information about specific provider practice motivations or the role of patient choice in hospitalization venues.

Conclusion: Rehospitalizations at different hospitals are common among Medicare patients, are more likely among those initially hospitalized at a for-profit hospital, and are related to increased overall payments without improved mortality.

Primary funding source: University of Wisconsin Hartford Center of Excellence in Geriatrics, National Institutes of Health.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Female
  • Hospital Bed Capacity / economics
  • Hospital Mortality
  • Hospitalization / economics*
  • Hospitals, Proprietary / economics*
  • Hospitals, Public / economics*
  • Hospitals, University / economics
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Medicare / economics*
  • Middle Aged
  • Odds Ratio
  • Time Factors
  • United States