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Under Pressure: Financial Effect of the Hospital-Acquired Conditions Initiative-A Statewide Analysis of Pressure Ulcer Development and Payment
Objectives To assess the financial effect of the 2008 Hospital‐Acquired Conditions Initiative (HACI) pressure ulcer payment changes on Medicare, other payers, and hospitals. Design Retrospective before‐and‐after study of all‐payer statewide administrative data for more than 2.4 million annual adult...
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Published in: | Journal of the American Geriatrics Society (JAGS) 2015-07, Vol.63 (7), p.1407-1412 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
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Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Objectives
To assess the financial effect of the 2008 Hospital‐Acquired Conditions Initiative (HACI) pressure ulcer payment changes on Medicare, other payers, and hospitals.
Design
Retrospective before‐and‐after study of all‐payer statewide administrative data for more than 2.4 million annual adult discharges in 2007 and 2009 using the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project State Inpatient Datasets for California. How often and by how much the 2008 payment changes for pressure ulcers affected hospital payment was assessed.
Setting
Nonfederal acute care California hospitals (N = 311).
Participants
Adults discharged from acute‐care hospitals.
Measurements
Pressure ulcer rates and hospital payment changes.
Results
Hospital‐acquired pressure ulcer rates were low in 2007 (0.28%) and 2009 (0.27%); present‐on‐admission pressure ulcer rates increased from 2.3% in 2007 to 3.0% in 2009. According to clinical stage of pressure ulcer (available in 2009), hospital‐acquired Stage III and IV ulcers occurred in 603 discharges (0.02%); 60,244 discharges (2.42%) contained other pressure ulcer diagnoses. Payment removal for Stage III and IV hospital‐acquired ulcers reduced payment in 75 (0.003%) discharges, for a statewide payment decrease of $310,444 (0.001%) for all payers and $199,238 (0.001%) for Medicare. For all other pressure ulcers, the Hospital‐Acquired Conditions Initiative reduced hospital payment in 20,246 (0.81%) cases (including 18,953 cases with present‐on‐admission ulcers), reducing statewide payment by $62,538,586 (0.21%) for all payers and $47,237,984 (0.32%) for Medicare.
Conclusion
The total financial effect of the 2008 payment changes for pressure ulcers was negligible. Most payment decreases occurred by removal of comorbidity payments for present‐on‐admission pressure ulcers other than Stages III and IV. The removal of payment for hospital‐acquired Stage III and IV ulcers by implementation of the HACI policy was 1/200th that of the removal of payment for other types of pressure ulcers that occurred in implementation of the Hospital‐Acquired Conditions Initiative. |
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ISSN: | 0002-8614 1532-5415 |
DOI: | 10.1111/jgs.13475 |