scholarly journals Examination of the New Short-Stay Nursing Home Quality Measures: Rehospitalizations, Emergency Department Visits, and Successful Returns to the Community

Author(s):  
Debra Saliba ◽  
David L. Weimer ◽  
Yuxi Shi ◽  
Dana B. Mukamel

In 2016, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) introduced 3 new quality measures (QMs) to its report card, Nursing Home Compare (NHC). These measures—rehospitalizations, emergency department visits, and successful discharges to the community—focus on short-stay residents. We offer a first analysis of nursing homes’ performance in terms of these new measures. We examined their properties and distribution across nursing homes using descriptive statistics and regression models. We found that, similar to other QMs, performance varies across the country, and that there is very minimal correlation between these 3 new QMs as well as between these QMs and other NHC QMs. Regression models reveal that better performance on these QMs tends to be associated with fewer deficiencies, higher staffing and more skilled staffing, nonprofit ownership, and lower proportion of Medicaid residents. Other characteristics are associated with better performance for some but not all 3 QMs. We also found improvement in all 3 QMs in the second year of publication. This study contributes to the validity of these measures by demonstrating their relationship to these structural QMs. It also suggests that these QMs are important by demonstrating their large variation across the country, suggesting substantial room for improvement, and finding that nursing homes are already responding to the incentives created by publication of these QMs.

2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Gruneir ◽  
Candemir Cigsar ◽  
Xuesong Wang ◽  
Alice Newman ◽  
Susan E. Bronskill ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S381-S381
Author(s):  
Ramona Backhaus ◽  
Hilde Verbeek ◽  
Bram De Boer ◽  
Erik Van Rossum ◽  
Jos Schols ◽  
...  

Abstract Related to the Dutch nursing home quality framework implemented in 2017, a staffing guideline was developed, aimed at assisting nursing homes to adequately staff their wards. For the Dutch Ministry of Health, we investigated the evidence base of this guideline. We critically reviewed scientific literature (n=65) and interviewed (inter)national experts (n=8) and potential guideline users (n=5). We found that departing a quality improvement dialogue directly from teams, clients and their families is positive. However, weaknesses were identified as well. Several risks exist for employees to adequately assess resident needs. Furthermore, buy-in is needed from board level to develop a vision on which competencies and amount of staff are needed to fulfill these needs. Examples of guideline improvement recommendations were assisting teams in how to assess resident needs, critically reflect on care provision and considering a role for (top)management. Overall, it was concluded that the value of the guideline was limited.


Medical Care ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 174-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Huiwen Xu ◽  
John R. Bowblis ◽  
Yue Li ◽  
Thomas V. Caprio ◽  
Orna Intrator

2019 ◽  
Vol 70 (8) ◽  
pp. 1620-1627 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin Antoine Brown ◽  
Nick Daneman ◽  
Kevin L Schwartz ◽  
Bradley Langford ◽  
Allison McGeer ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Rates of antibiotic use vary widely across nursing homes and cannot be explained by resident characteristics. Antibiotic prescribing for a presumed urinary tract infection is often preceded by inappropriate urine culturing. We examined nursing home urine-culturing practices and their association with antibiotic use. Methods We conducted a longitudinal, multilevel, retrospective cohort study based on quarterly nursing home assessments between April 2014 and January 2017 in 591 nursing homes and covering >90% of nursing home residents in Ontario, Canada. Nursing home urine culturing was measured as the proportion of residents with a urine culture in the prior 14 days. Outcomes included receipt of any systemic antibiotic and any urinary antibiotic (eg, nitrofurantoin, trimethoprim/sulfonamides, ciprofloxacin) in the 30 days after the assessment and Clostridiodes difficile infection in the 90 days after the assessment. Adjusted Poisson regression models accounted for 14 resident covariates. Results A total of 131 218 residents in 591 nursing homes were included; 7.9% of resident assessments had a urine culture in the prior 14 days; this proportion was highly variable across the 591 nursing homes (10th percentile = 3.4%, 90th percentile = 14.3%). Before and after adjusting for 14 resident characteristics, nursing home urine culturing predicted total antibiotic use (adjusted risk ratio [RR] per doubling of urine culturing, 1.21; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.18–1.23), urinary antibiotic use (RR, 1.33; 95% CI, 1.28–1.38), and C. difficile infection (incidence rate ratio, 1.18; 95% CI, 1.07–1.31). Conclusions Nursing homes have highly divergent urine culturing rates; this variability is associated with higher antibiotic use and rates of C. difficile infection.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-7
Author(s):  
Mieczysław Szyszkowicz ◽  
Eugeniusz Porada ◽  
Neil Tremblay ◽  
Eric Grafstein

The purpose of this study was to assess an association between ambient sulfur dioxide and the number of emergency department (ED) visits for ischemic stroke and seizure. The study used data collected in a Vancouver (Canada) hospital in the years 1999–2003. Daily ED visits diagnosed as ministroke, stroke, or seizure were investigated using the case-crossover technique. Conditional logistic regression models were applied to estimate the odds ratios (ORs) and their respective 95% confidence intervals (CIs). The models included temperature and relative humidity in the form of natural splines. The results were reported for an increase in interquartile range ((IQR),IQR=1.9ppb for SO2). Positive and statistically significant associations were obtained for SO2and ischemic stroke for all patients (OR=1.12; CI 1.02, 1.23; lag 3) and for female patients (OR=1.17; CI 1.01, 1.33; lag 0). In the case of ED visits for seizure, for female patients the results were also statistically significant (OR=1.15; CI 1.02, 1.28; lag 1 andOR=1.18; CI 1.05, 1.32; lag 2). These findings suggest that cases of ischemic cerebrovascular accidents are associated with acute exposure to ambient sulfur dioxide.


2003 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephanie Kissam ◽  
David Gifford ◽  
Peggy Parks ◽  
Gail Patry ◽  
Laura Palmer ◽  
...  

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