Higher continuity of care was associated with reductions in one-year readmissions following initial COPD admission in both Norway and Germany.
Observational
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Does higher continuity of care reduce hospital readmissions in COPD patients?
Higher continuity of care is associated with reduced hospital readmissions for COPD patients, highlighting the importance of care continuity policies.
BACKGROUND: This study compares continuity of care between Germany - a social health insurance country, and Norway - a national health service country with gatekeeping and patient lists for COPD patients before and after initial hospitalization. We also investigate how subsequent readmissions are affected. METHODS: Continuity of Care Index (COCI), Usual Provider Index (UPC) and Sequential Continuity Index (SECON) were calculated using insurance claims and national register data (2009-14). These indices were used in negative binomial and logistic regressions to estimate incident rate ratios (IRR) and odds ratios (OR) for comparing readmissions. RESULTS: All continuity indices were significantly lower in Norway. One year readmissions were significantly higher in Germany, whereas 30-day rates were not. All indices measured one year after discharge were negatively associated with one-year readmissions for both countries. Significant associations between indices measured before hospitalization and readmissions were only observed in Norway - all indices for one-year readmissions and SECON for 30-day readmissions. CONCLUSION: Our findings indicate higher continuity is associated with reductions in readmissions following initial COPD admission. This is observed both before and after hospitalization in a system with gatekeeping and patient lists, yet only after for a system lacking such arrangements. These results emphasize the need for policy strategies to further investigate and promote care continuity in order to reduce hospital readmission burden for COPD patients.
Swanson et al. (Sat,) conducted a observational in COPD. Continuity of care vs. Lower continuity of care was evaluated on 30-day and one-year readmissions. Higher continuity of care was associated with reductions in one-year readmissions following initial COPD admission in both Norway and Germany.
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