Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01440907

Study of the Impact of a Hospital Discharge Care Coordination Program in an Elderly Population

The Effect of an HIE-Supported Care Coordination Package on Hospital Re-Admission Rates in an Elderly Population

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
201 (actual)
Sponsor
Weill Medical College of Cornell University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this research study is to evaluate the effect of a health information exchange (HIE)-supported care coordination package on 30-day readmission rates in a frail elderly population.

Detailed description

BACKGROUND Reducing hospital readmission rates is a top national priority. Unplanned hospital readmission is estimated to have accounted for more than $17 billion of the roughly $103 billion hospital payments made by Medicare in 2004.1 For patients in Medicare fee-for-service programs, the 30-day hospital readmission rates was recently found to be 19.6% nationally, and 20.7% in New York State (Jencks et al., 2009). Hospitals have urgent incentives to address readmission rates: readmission rates have been added to the National Quality Forum performance metrics (National Quality Forum, 2007); readmission rate comparisons are posted on www.hospitalcompare.hss.gov as public indicators of hospital quality; and provisions in health care reform legislation will soon mean that hospitals will not receive payment for many readmissions within 30 days of discharge. Targeted transitional programs and better coordination of care between inpatient and outpatient settings have the potential to reduce hospital readmission rates (Naylor et al, 2004; Coleman et al, 2006; Peikes et al, 2009). Successful care coordination measures depend upon the effective transmission of health information between the inpatient and outpatient settings. The Brooklyn Health Information Exchange (BHIX) is a regional health information organization (RHIO) that provides secure health information exchange (HIE) services among participating health-care organizations in Brooklyn, Queens, and other parts of New York City. HIE allows the meaningful sharing of health information of locations where a patients may receive care or healthcare services and can be used to help improve the effective transmission of health information between inpatient and outpatient settings. Maimonides Medical Center is working with BHIX to offer a health information technology- and HIE-based care coordination program (CCP) to help improve the care of frail elderly patients upon discharge. The CCP includes: (1) access to a secure online personal health record (PHR) that people can logon and manage their health information, as well as receive alerts and reminders about action items for them to take on their healthcare; and (2) depending on the patient's health care needs, nursing support (either in-person or by phone). The main objective of this study to determine the impact of the CCP in a frail elderly population. SPECIFIC AIMS Weill Cornell Investigators will be analyzing a HIPAA-defined de-identified dataset from BHIX to evaluate the impact of the CCP. The two main outcomes we will be addressing in our data analysis are: 1. Readmission to any BHIX hospital within 30 days of hospital discharge from Maimonides; 2. Number of inpatient days within 30 days after being discharged from Maimonides Hospital. See CITATIONS, for references.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERCare Coordination ProgramThe Care Coordination Program includes: (1) access to a secure online personal health record (PHR) that people can logon and manage their health information, as well as receive alerts and reminders about action items for them to take on their healthcare; and (2) depending on the patient's health care needs, nursing support (either in-person or by phone).

Timeline

Start date
2011-05-01
Primary completion
2012-06-01
Completion
2013-07-01
First posted
2011-09-27
Last updated
2017-01-24

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01440907. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.