Do Readmission Rates Accurately Measure Hospital Quality?

Authors: Krumholz HM et al. N Engl J Med 2017 Sep 14.

Hospital quality contributes to readmission rates, independent of patient factors.

Readmission rates are a common measure of hospital quality. Concerns have been raised that national readmission measures might reflect differences in unmeasured factors, such as patients’ social welfare or educational levels, rather than hospital performance.

To determine whether hospital features contribute to readmission risk, independent of patient factors, researchers identified >7 million Medicare patient admissions in 2014 and 2015. Half the sample was used to classify admitting hospitals into risk-standardized quartiles of 30-day readmission performance; the median readmission rate was 15.5%. From the other half of the sample, the investigators identified >37,000 patients, each of whom had two admissions for similar diagnoses at two hospitals in different quartiles. When the same patient was admitted both to a hospital in the best-performing quartile and to a hospital in the worst-performing quartile during the same year, risk for readmission was 2 percentage points higher after discharge from the worst-performing hospital.

Comments

These findings suggest that hospital quality contributes, at least in part, to readmission rates, independent of patient factors; this might reassure those concerned about the validity of hospital-wide readmission measures. However, overall readmission rates are not the current standard used by the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program (HRRP; which focusses on readmissions for only a few diagnoses), and they might have substantial disadvantages (NEJM JW Hosp Med Jan 2018 and N Engl J Med 2017; 377:1551). Importantly, this study does not address whether patient-level social-risk factors (i.e., socioeconomic disadvantage) contribute to higher readmission rates in some hospitals.

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