Source
VISN-8 Patient Safety Center of Inquiry, James A Haley VAMC, Tampa, FL 33612, USA. Dustin.French@va.gov
Abstract
OBJECTIVES:
The aim of this study was to provide national annualized descriptive statistics of the hospital admissions for long-stay nursing home residents.
DESIGN:
National, descriptive, secondary data analysis.
SETTING:
National, Veterans Health Administration (VHA), 136 VHA nursing homes.
PARTICIPANTS:
Our study population consisted of 6554 VHA long-stay nursing home residents who had an annual assessment during FY 2005, identified from the Minimum Data Set (MDS). These residents were linked with the national VHA discharge dataset.
MEASUREMENT:
We provide descriptive statistics of the major diagnostic categories (MDC) and diagnosis related groups (DRG) for long-stay residents admitted to a VHA hospital where the source of admission was from the VHA nursing home.
RESULTS:
Overall, 28.57% (1873/6554) of VHA long-stay residents were hospitalized. The top 5 MDC accounted for over 70% of the hospitalizations. The frequency of MDC associated with hospital admissions, in descending order, were respiratory system (25.33%), kidney and urinary tract (15.88%), circulatory (14.65%), digestive system (9.39%), and nervous system (5.16%). Nearly 25,000 bed days of care (BDC) were associated with these hospitalizations. The top 3 DRG (DRG 320- Med kidney & urinary tract, 89-Med simple pneumonia & pleurisy, 79-Med respiratory infections & inflammations) accounted for nearly 25% of all the hospitalizations and approximately 23% of the BDC.
CONCLUSIONS:
VHA nursing homes do not have the financial incentives that impact the decision to hospitalize that exist in the non-VHA sector. This unique feature of the VHA's nursing homes would allow one to study the issue of potentially preventable hospitalizations in long-stay residents without the confounding impact of Medicare and Medicaid payment incentives. Because of the importance of this policy issue in the national long-term care debate, further VHA studies may provide important empirically based policy input.