Skip to main content

Citation

Colla, Carrie H.; Lewis, Valerie A.; Stachowski, Courtney; Usadi, Benjamin; Gottlieb, Daniel J.; & Bynum, Julie P. W. (2019). Changes in Use of Postacute Care Associated with Accountable Care Organizations in Hip Fracture, Stroke, and Pneumonia Hospitalized Cohorts. Medical Care, 57(6), 444-452. PMCID: PMC6522306

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To examine changes in more and less discretionary condition-specific postacute care use (skilled nursing, inpatient rehabilitation, home health) associated with Medicare accountable care organization (ACO) implementation.
DATA SOURCES: 2009-2014 Medicare fee-for-service claims.
STUDY DESIGN: Difference-in-difference methodology comparing postacute outcomes after hospitalization for hip fracture and stroke (where rehabilitation is fundamental to the episode of care) to pneumonia, (where it is more discretionary) for beneficiaries attributed to ACO and non-ACO providers.
PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Across all 3 cohorts, in the baseline period ACO patients were more likely to receive Medicare-paid postacute care and had higher episode spending. In hip fracture patients where rehabilitation is standard of care, ACO implementation was associated with 6%-8% increases in probability of admission to a skilled nursing facility or inpatient rehabilitation (compared with home without care), and a slight reduction in readmissions. In a clinical condition where rehabilitation is more discretionary, pneumonia, ACO implementation was not associated with changes in postacute location, but episodic spending decreased 2%-3%. Spending decreases were concentrated in the least complex patients. Across all cohorts, the length of stay in skilled nursing facilities decreased with ACO implementation.
CONCLUSIONS: ACOs decreased spending on postacute care by decreasing use of discretionary services. ACO implementation was associated with reduced length of stay in skilled nursing facilities, while hip fracture patients used institutional postacute settings at higher rates. Among pneumonia patients, we observed decreases in spending, readmission days, and mortality associated with ACO implementation.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/mlr.0000000000001121

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2019

Journal Title

Medical Care

Author(s)

Colla, Carrie H.
Lewis, Valerie A.
Stachowski, Courtney
Usadi, Benjamin
Gottlieb, Daniel J.
Bynum, Julie P. W.

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC6522306

Data Set/Study

Medicare fee-for-service claims

Continent/Country

United States

State

Nonspecific