National Center for School Crisis and Bereavement
SHOTS -NPR's Health Blog
CDC - Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
-----------------------------
NY Organ Donor Network
Making Health Care Safer
Smoking causes immediate damage
Get Smart for Healthcare
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

eHealth Topics

Donate Life America

Bertalan Mesko,MD,PhD
Editor-in-Chief

CDC.gov
CDC.gov

Alzheimer's Disease Education & Referral Center

Colorectal Cancer Screen
Adult Smoking
CDC.gov
Child Safety Network

Healthy Environment,Healthy Kids

NRC Widget

Change in Inpatient Rehabilitation Admissions for Individuals With Traumatic Brain Injury After Implementation of the Medicare Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility Prospective Payment System

Abstract:
Hoffman JM,Donoso Brown E,Chan L,Dikmen S,Temkin N,Bell KR. Change in inpatient rehabilitation admissions for individuals with traumatic brain injury after implementation of the Medicare inpatient rehabilitation facility prospective payment system.

Objective:
To evaluate the impact of Medicare’s inpatient rehabilitation facility (IRF) prospective payment system (PPS) on use of inpatient rehabilitation for individuals with traumatic brain injury (TBI).

Design:
Retrospective cohort study of patients with TBI.

Setting:
One hundred twenty-three level I and II trauma centers across the U.S. who contributed data to the National Trauma Data Bank.

Participants:
Patients (N=135,842) with TBI and an Abbreviated Injury Score of the head of 2 or greater admitted to trauma centers between 1995 and 2004.

Interventions:
None.

Main Outcome Measure:
Discharge location:IRF,skilled nursing facility,home,and other hospitals.

Results:
Compared with inpatient rehabilitation admissions before IRF PPS came into effect,demographic characteristics of admitted patients changed. Those admitted to acute care trauma centers after PPS was enacted (January 2002) were older and nonwhite. No differences were found in rates of injury between men and women. Over time,there was a significant drop in the percent of patients being discharged to inpatient rehabilitation,which varied by region,but was found across all insurance types. In a logistic regression,after controlling for patient characteristics (age,sex,race),injury characteristics (cause,severity),insurance type,and facility,the odds of being discharged to an IRF after a TBI decreased 16% after Medicare’s IRF PPS system was enacted.

Conclusions:
The enactment of the Medicare PPS appears to be associated with a reduction in the chance that patients receive inpatient rehabilitation treatment after a TBI. The impact of these changes on the cost,quality of care,and patient outcome is unknown and should be addressed in future studies.

Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

Be Sociable,Share!

Leave a Reply

  

  

  

You can use these HTML tags

<a href=""title=""><abbr title=""><acronym title=""><b><blockquote cite=""><cite><code><del datetime=""><em><i><q cite=""><strike><strong>