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Review
. 2014:65:471-85.
doi: 10.1146/annurev-med-022613-090415. Epub 2013 Oct 21.

Reducing hospital readmission rates: current strategies and future directions

Affiliations
Review

Reducing hospital readmission rates: current strategies and future directions

Sunil Kripalani et al. Annu Rev Med. 2014.

Abstract

New financial penalties for institutions with high readmission rates have intensified efforts to reduce rehospitalization. Several interventions that involve multiple components (e.g., patient needs assessment, medication reconciliation, patient education, arranging timely outpatient appointments, and providing telephone follow-up) have successfully reduced readmission rates for patients discharged to home. The effect of interventions on readmission rates is related to the number of components implemented; single-component interventions are unlikely to reduce readmissions significantly. For patients discharged to postacute care facilities, multicomponent interventions have reduced readmissions through enhanced communication, medication safety, advanced care planning, and enhanced training to manage medical conditions that commonly precipitate readmission. To help hospitals direct resources and services to patients with greater likelihood of readmission, risk-stratification methods are available. Future work should better define the roles of home-based services, information technology, mental health care, caregiver support, community partnerships, and new transitional care personnel.

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Conflict of interest statement

Disclosures

Dr. Kripalani is a consultant to and holds equity in PictureRx, LLC, which makes patient education materials; and has a consulting agreement with Amedisys, Inc. Neither company played a role in the preparation of this review article. Drs. Theobald and Vasilevskis and Mrs. Anctil do not have relevant conflicts of interest to disclose.

Figures

Figure
Figure
The Ideal Transition in Care framework. (Reprinted with permission)

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