Telephonic follow-up within 14 days of hospital discharge reduced the likelihood of 30-day hospital readmission by 23.1% among patients in a chronic disease management program.
Cohort (n=30,272)
Effect estimate: OR 1.259 (for not receiving a call) (95% CI 1.007-1.573)
p-value: p=0.043
Abstract Recurrent hospitalizations are responsible for considerable health care spending, although prior studies have shown that a substantial proportion of readmissions are preventable through effective discharge planning and patient follow-up after the initial hospital visit. This retrospective cohort study was undertaken to determine whether telephonic outreach to ensure patient understanding of and adherence to discharge orders following a hospitalization is effective at reducing hospital readmissions within 30 days after discharge. Claims data were analyzed from 30,272 members of a commercial health plan who were discharged from a hospital in 2008 to determine the impact of telephonic intervention on the reduction of 30-day readmissions. Members who received a telephone call within 14 days of discharge and were not readmitted prior to that call comprised the intervention group; all other members formed the comparison group. Multiple logistic regression was used to determine the impact of the intervention on 30-day readmissions, after adjusting for covariates. Results demonstrated that older age, male sex, and increased initial hospitalization length of stay were associated with an increased likelihood of readmission (P < 0.001). Receipt of a discharge call was associated with reduced rates of readmission; intervention group members were 23.1% less likely than the comparison group to be readmitted within 30 days of hospital discharge (P = 0.043). These findings indicate that timely discharge follow-up by telephone to supplement standard care is effective at reducing near-term hospital readmissions and, thus, provides a means of reducing costs for health plans and their members.
Harrison et al. (Fri,) conducted a cohort in Hospital discharge in patients with chronic diseases (n=30,272). Postdischarge telephonic follow-up vs. No telephone call within 14 days of discharge was evaluated on Hospital readmission within 30 days of discharge (OR 1.259 (for not receiving a call), 95% CI 1.007-1.573, p=0.043). Telephonic follow-up within 14 days of hospital discharge reduced the likelihood of 30-day hospital readmission by 23.1% among patients in a chronic disease management program.
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