Monday, July 2, 2018

Medicare Advantage enrollees spend less time in rehab


By Virgil Dickson  | July 2, 2018
Medicare Advantage enrollees spend less time in nursing facilities after surgery and are less likely to be readmitted to the hospital when compared with those in traditional Medicare, according to a new report.

MA enrollees on average spent five fewer days in skilled nursing facilities and received 463 fewer minutes of rehabilitation therapy for hip fractures, according to a report in the June 2018 edition of PLOS Medicine, a peer-reviewed journal.

MA patients also were less likely to be readmitted to hospitals, less likely to become a long-term resident at a nursing home and were more likely to stay in their communities after release from rehab compared to fee-for-service Medicare patients.

"The results suggest that for hip fracture patients who are otherwise healthy, longer lengths of stay in skilled nursing facilities may not translate to better outcomes," Vincent Mor, the study's co-author and a professor of health services, policy and practice at Brown University, said in a statement.

The results come as the number of seniors in MA plans continues to rise and as the CMS seeks to cut spending on skilled-nursing homes by creating a new value-based care model.

Medicare spending for skilled-nursing facility services in fiscal 2002 was $14.5 billion, about 5.6% of total Medicare spending. By 2016, that budget was $29.1 billion or about 8% of Medicare spending, according to the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission.

Brown researchers looked at claims for 211,296 fee-for-service and 75,554 MA patients with hip fractures admitted directly to a skilled-nursing facility following a hospitalization from 2011 to 2015.

The difference in length of stay at skilled-nursing facilities and outcomes may come down to several factors. MA plans have narrow networks made up of providers with high-quality scores and low spending habits. MA plans also have stronger care-management protocols in place, including case managers and nurse practitioners to monitor patients after they leave a hospital. Studies have shown this extra touch leads to preventable hospitalizations, according to the PLOS study.

Brown researchers say the results should help inform the CMS' ongoing efforts to develop value-based purchasing models that aim to reduce unnecessary use of skilled-nursing facilities, or SNFs.

Nursing homes don't want the CMS to use this study to promote value-based care initiatives. The nursing home industry has historically been critical of managed care because they say they aren't paid in a timely manner compared with fee-for-service Medicare and that they limit access to their networks.

"The report relies on analysis of hip fractures to make broad conclusions about the benefits and outcomes of Medicare Advantage plans," said a spokeswoman for the American Health Care Association, a trade association. "While some people may be able to recover more efficiently than others, there are a number of variables which should be considered other than just the procedure."

Factors that also contribute to length of stay include age, general health, chronic illnesses, home environment and social supports, she said.

The study "was limited in terms of the conditions that led to the participants' need for SNF care," added a spokeswoman for Leading Age, a trade association.

"Before these findings are applied full-scale by Medicare Advantage plans, we would want to see research that includes utilization by and outcomes of people with a range of complex conditions," she said.

Virgil Dickson reports from Washington on the federal regulatory agencies. His experience before joining Modern Healthcare in 2013 includes serving as the Washington-based correspondent for PRWeek and as an editor/reporter for FDA News. Dickson earned a bachelor's degree from DePaul University in 2007.

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