By Julie Appleby MAY 24, 2021
Hospital-level care at
home — some of it provided over the internet — is poised to grow after more
than a decade as a niche offering, boosted both by hospitals eager to ease
overcrowding during the pandemic and growing interest by insurers who want to
slow health care spending. But a host of challenges remain, from deciding how
much to pay for such services to which kinds of patients can safely benefit.
Under the model, patients
with certain medical conditions, such as pneumonia or heart failure — even
moderate covid — are offered high-acuity care in their homes, with 24/7 remote
monitoring and daily visits by medical providers.
In the latest sign that
the idea is catching on, two big players — Kaiser Permanente and the Mayo
Clinic — announced plans this month to
collectively invest $100 million into Medically Home, a Boston-based company
that provides such services to scale up and expand their programs. The two
organizations estimate that 30% of patients currently admitted to hospitals
nationally have conditions eligible for in-home care. (KHN is not affiliated
with Kaiser Permanente.)
Several other well-known
hospital systems launched programs last summer. They join about two dozen already
offering the service, including Johns Hopkins Medicine in Baltimore,
Presbyterian Healthcare Services in New Mexico and Massachusetts General
Hospital.
But hospitals have other
financial considerations that are also part of the calculation. Systems that
have built sparkling new in-patient facilities in the past decade, floating
bonds and taking out loans to finance them, need patients filling costly
inpatient beds to repay lenders and recoup investments.
And “hospitals that have
surplus capacity, whether because they have newly built beds or shrinking
populations or are losing business to competitors, are not going to be eager
about this,” said Dr. Jeff Levin-Scherz, co-leader of the North American Health
Management practice at consultancy Willis Towers Watson.
Medicare gave the idea a
boost in November when it agreed to pay for such care, to help keep non-covid
patients out of the hospital during the pandemic. Since then, more than 100 hospitals have been
approved by Medicare to participate, although not all are in place yet.
Tasting opportunity,
Amazon and a coalition of industry groups in March announced plans to lobby for
changes in federal and state rules to allow broader access to a wide range of
in-home medical services.
“We’re seeing tremendous
momentum,” said Dr. Bruce Leff, a Johns Hopkins Medical School geriatrician who
has studied and advocated for the hospital-at-home approach since he helped
establish one of the nation’s first programs in the mid-1990s.
Leff and other proponents
say various studies show in-home care is just as safe and may
produce better outcomes than being in the hospital, and it saves money by
limiting the need to expand hospitals, reducing hospital readmissions and
helping patients avoid nursing home stays. Some estimates put the projected savings at
30% over traditional hospital care. But ongoing programs are a long way from
making a dent in the nation’s $1.2 trillion hospital tab.
While the goal is to
shift 10% or more of hospital patients to home settings, existing programs
handle far fewer cases, sometimes serving only a handful of patients.
“In a lot of ways, this
remains aspirational; this is the early innings,” said Dean Ungar, who follows
the insurance and hospital industries as a vice president and senior credit
officer at Moody’s Investors Service. Still, he predicted that “hospitals will
increasingly be reserved for acute care [such as surgeries and ICUs].”
Challenges to scaling up
include maintaining the current good safety profile in the face of rapid growth
and finding enough medical staff — especially nurses, paramedics and
technicians — who travel to patients’ homes.
The attraction for
insurers is clear: If they can pay for care in a lower-cost setting than the
hospital, with good outcomes, they save money.
For hospitals, “the
financials of it are, frankly, a little tough,” said Levin-Scherz.
Those most attracted to
hospital-at-home programs run at or near capacity and want to free up beds.
Even so, Gerard Anderson,
a health policy professor at Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of
Public Health, said hospitals likely see the potential, long term, for “huge
profit margins” through “saving a lot of capital and personnel expense by
having the work done at home.”
But Anderson worries that
broad expansion of hospital-at-home efforts could exacerbate health care
inequities.
“It’s realistic in
middle- and upper-middle-class households,” Anderson said. “My concern is in
impoverished areas. They may not have the infrastructure to handle it.”
Suburban and rural areas
— and even some lower-income urban areas — can have spotty or nonexistent
internet access. How will that affect the ability of those areas to
participate, to communicate with physicians and other hospital staff members
miles away? Proponents outline solutions, from providing patients with “hot
spot” devices that provide internet service, along with backup power and
instant communication via walkie-talkie-type handsets and computer tablets.
Social factors play a big
part, too. Those who live alone may find it harder to qualify if they need a
lot of help, while those in crowded households may not have enough room or
privacy.
Another possible wrinkle:
Not all patients have the necessary human support, such as someone to help an
ill patient with the bathroom, meals or even answering the door.
That’s why both patients
and their caregivers should get a detailed explanation of the day-to-day
responsibilities before agreeing to participate, said Alexandra Drane, CEO of
Archangels, a for-profit group that works with employers and provides resources
for unpaid caregivers.
“I love the concept for a
resourced household where someone can take this job on,” said Drane. “But
there’s a lot of situations where that’s not possible. What If I have a
full-time job and two children, when am I supposed to do this?”
The programs all say they
aim to reduce the burden on families. Some provide aides to help with bathing
or other home care issues and provide food. None expects family members to
perform medical procedures. The programs supply monitoring and communication
equipment and a hospital bed, if needed.
“We see the patient in
their home setting,” said Morre Dean, president of Adventist Health’s hospital
at home program, which serves a broad area of California and part of Oregon.
“What is in their refrigerator? What is their living situation? Can we impact
that? We aren’t reliant on the family to deliver care.”
Patients are typically
visited in their homes daily by various health workers. Physicians make home
visits in some programs, but most employ doctors to oversee care from remote
“command centers,” talking with patients via various electronic gadgets.
All of that was delivered
to James Clifford’s home in Bakersfield, California, after he opted to
participate in the Adventist program so he could leave the hospital and finish
treatment for an infection at home. It required coordination — his wife had to
be at their house for the set-up team even as she was scheduled to pick him up
— but “once it was set up, it worked well.”
At home, he needed
treatment with antibiotics every eight hours for several days and “one nurse
came at 2 a.m.,” said Clifford, 70. “It woke up my wife, but that’s OK. We had
peace of mind by my being at home.”
Adventist launched
its program a year ago, but it hasn’t
achieved the scale needed to save money yet, said Dean. Ultimately, he
envisions the hospital-at-home option as “our biggest hospital in Adventist
Health,” with 500 to 1,500 patients in the program at a time.
Medicare’s payment
decision gave momentum to such goals. But the natural experiment it created
with its funding ends when the pandemic is declared over. Because of the
emergency, Medicare paid the same as it would for in-hospital care, based on
each patient’s diagnosis. Will hospitals be as enthusiastic if that is not the
case in the future? Commercial insurers are unlikely to pay unless they see
lower rates, since there are already concerns about overuse.
“From a societal
perspective, it’s great if these programs replace expensive inpatient care,”
said Levin-Scherz at Towers. But, he said, it would be a negative if the
programs sought to grow by admitting patients who otherwise would not have gone
into the hospital at all and could have been treated with lower-cost outpatient
services.
https://khn.org/news/article/is-your-living-room-the-future-of-hospital-care/
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