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Successfully Reducing Hospitalizations of Nursing Home Residents: Results of the Missouri Quality Initiative
Authors:Marilyn J Rantz  Lori Popejoy  Amy Vogelsmeier  Colleen Galambos  Greg Alexander  Marcia Flesner  Charles Crecelius  Bin Ge  Gregory Petroski
Institution:1. Sinclair School of Nursing, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri;2. Department of Social Work, College of Human and Environmental Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri;3. Office of Medical Research, School of Medicine, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri
Abstract:

Purpose

The goals of the Missouri Quality Initiative (MOQI) for long-stay nursing home residents were to reduce the frequency of avoidable hospital admissions and readmissions, improve resident health outcomes, improve the process of transitioning between inpatient hospitals and nursing facilities, and reduce overall healthcare spending without restricting access to care or choice of providers. The MOQI was one of 7 program sites in the United States, with specific interventions unique to each site tested for the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services (CMS) Innovations Center.

Design and methods

A prospective, single group intervention design, the MOQI included an advanced practice registered nurse (APRN) embedded full-time within each nursing home (NH) to influence resident care outcomes. Data were collected continuously for more than 3 years from an average of 1750 long-stay Medicare, Medicaid, and private pay residents living each day in 16 participating nursing homes in urban, metro, and rural communities within 80 miles of a major Midwestern city in Missouri. Performance feedback reports were provided to each facility summarizing their all-cause hospitalizations and potentially avoidable hospitalizations as well as a support team of social work, health information technology, and INTERACT/Quality Improvement Coaches.

Results

The MOQI achieved a 30% reduction in all-cause hospitalizations and statistically significant reductions in 4 single quarters of the 2.75 years of full implementation of the intervention for long-stay nursing home residents.

Implications

As the population of older people explodes in upcoming decades, it is critical to find good solutions to deal with increasing costs of health care. APRNs, working with multidisciplinary support teams, are a good solution to improving care and reducing costs if all nursing home residents have access to APRNs nationwide.
Keywords:Nursing homes  hospitalizations  avoidable hospitalizations  Medicare beneficiaries  interventions  care transitions  end-of-life care  health information technology  performance feedback reports
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