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Selected AbstractsWhat Happens When Hospital-Based Skilled Nursing Facilities Close?HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, Issue 6p1 2005A Propensity Score Analysis Objective. To assess the effects of hospital-based skilled nursing facility (HBSNF) closures on health care utilization, spending, and outcomes among Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries. Data Sources. One hundred percent Medicare fee-for-service claims files for 1997,2002 were merged with Medicare Provider of Services files and beneficiary-level enrollment records. Study Design. Medicare spending, the use of postacute care, and health outcomes, were compared among hospitals that did and did not close their HBSNFs between 1997 and 2001. Hospitals were stratified according to propensity scores (i.e., predicted probability of closure from a logistic regression) and analyses were conducted within these strata. Principal Findings. HBSNF closures were associated with increased utilization of alternative postacute care settings, and longer acute care hospital stays. Because of increased use of alternative settings, HBSNF closures were associated with a slight increase in total Medicare spending. There are no statistically robust associations between HBSNF closures and changes in either mortality or rehospitalization. Conclusions. HBSNF closures altered utilization patterns, but there is no indication that closures adversely affect beneficiaries' health outcomes. [source] Home Health Care Agency Staffing Patterns Before and After the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, by Rural and Urban LocationTHE JOURNAL OF RURAL HEALTH, Issue 1 2008William J. McAuley PhD ABSTRACT:,Context:The Balanced Budget Act (BBA) of 1997 and other recent policies have led to reduced Medicare funding for home health agencies (HHAs) and visits per beneficiary. Purpose: We examine the staffing characteristics of stable Medicare-certified HHAs across rural and urban counties from 1996 to 2002, a period encompassing the changes associated with the BBA and related policies. Methods: Data were drawn from Medicare Provider of Service files and the Area Resource File. The unit of analysis was the 3,126 counties in the United States, grouped into 5 categories: metropolitan, nonmetropolitan adjacent, and 3 nonmetropolitan nonadjacent groups identified by largest town size. Only relatively stable HHAs were included. We generated summary HHA staff statistics for each county group and year. Findings: All staff categories, other than therapists, declined from 1997 to 2002 across the metropolitan and nonmetropolitan county groupings. There were substantial population-adjusted decreases in stable HHA-based home health aides in all counties, including remote counties. Conclusions: The limited presence of stable HHA staff in certain nonmetropolitan county types has been exacerbated since implementation of the BBA, especially in the most rural counties. The loss of aides in more rural counties may limit the availability of home-based long-term care in these locations, where the need for long-term care is considerable. Future research should examine the degree to which the presence of HHA staff influences actual access and whether other paid and unpaid sources of care substitute for Medicare home health care in counties with limited supplies of HHA staff. [source] Use of Medicare and Department of Veterans Affairs Health Care by Veterans with Dementia: A Longitudinal AnalysisJOURNAL OF AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, Issue 10 2009Carolyn W. Zhu PhD The objectives of this study were to examine longitudinal patterns of Department of Veterans Affairs (VA),only use, dual VA and Medicare use, and Medicare-only use by veterans with dementia. Data on VA and Medicare use were obtained from VA administrative datasets and Medicare claims (1998,2001) for 2,137 male veterans who, in 1997, used some VA services, had a formal diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease or vascular dementia in the VA, and were aged 65 and older. Generalized ordered logit models were used to estimate the effects of patient characteristics on use group over time. In 1998, 41.7% of the sample were VA-only users, 55.4% were dual users, and 2.9% were Medicare-only users. By 2001, 30.4% were VA-only users, 51.5% were dual users, and 18.1% were Medicare-only users. Multivariate results show that greater likelihood of Medicare use was associated with older age, being white, being married, having higher education, having private insurance or Medicaid, having low VA priority level, and living in a nursing home or dying during the year. Higher comorbidities were associated with greater likelihood of dual use as opposed to any single system use. Alternatively, number of functional limitations was associated with greater likelihood of Medicare-only use and less likelihood of VA-only use. These results imply that different aspects of veterans' needs have differential effects on where they seek care. Efforts to coordinate care between VA and Medicare providers are necessary to ensure that patients receive high-quality care, especially patients with multiple comorbidities. [source] Long-Term Acute Care: A Review of the LiteratureJOURNAL OF AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, Issue 5 2007Manuel A. Eskildsen MD Long-term acute care (LTAC) represents a rapidly growing category of Medicare providers, but little is known about its quality, outcomes, and cost-effectiveness. Its defining characteristic, as set by Medicare, is an average length of stay of greater than 25 days. Modern LTAC emerged in the early 1980s as a setting for the weaning of ventilator-dependent patients. The industry has developed greatly in the last few years, with for-profit corporations dominating the field, and as Medicare expenditures have grown, new payment systems have emerged to limit spiraling costs. Although LTAC is mainly known for providing chronic ventilator weaning, the case mix is varied. The majority of outcome studies in this setting have been done on pulmonary patients, with fewer data available on nonventilator patients. This article analyzes studies of LTAC that are currently available, discusses some of the public policy issues surrounding this level of care, and suggests a research agenda, including a role for the field of geriatrics. [source] |