Functional Status Outperforms Comorbidities in Predicting Acute Care Readmissions in Medically Complex Patients

Objective To examine functional status versus medical comorbidities as predictors of acute care readmissions in medically complex patients. Design Retrospective database study. Setting U.S. inpatient rehabilitation facilities. Participants Subjects included 120,957 patients in the Uniform Data Syste...

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Published inJournal of general internal medicine : JGIM Vol. 30; no. 11; pp. 1688 - 1695
Main Authors Shih, Shirley L., Gerrard, Paul, Goldstein, Richard, Mix, Jacqueline, Ryan, Colleen M., Niewczyk, Paulette, Kazis, Lewis, Hefner, Jaye, Ackerly, D. Clay, Zafonte, Ross, Schneider, Jeffrey C.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Springer US 01.11.2015
Springer Nature B.V
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ISSN0884-8734
1525-1497
1525-1497
DOI10.1007/s11606-015-3350-2

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Summary:Objective To examine functional status versus medical comorbidities as predictors of acute care readmissions in medically complex patients. Design Retrospective database study. Setting U.S. inpatient rehabilitation facilities. Participants Subjects included 120,957 patients in the Uniform Data System for Medical Rehabilitation admitted to inpatient rehabilitation facilities under the medically complex impairment group code between 2002 and 2011. Interventions A Basic Model based on gender and functional status was developed using logistic regression to predict the odds of 3-, 7-, and 30-day readmission from inpatient rehabilitation facilities to acute care hospitals. Functional status was measured by the FIM ® motor score. The Basic Model was compared to six other predictive models—three Basic Plus Models that added a comorbidity measure to the Basic Model and three Gender-Comorbidity Models that included only gender and a comorbidity measure. The three comorbidity measures used were the Elixhauser index, Deyo-Charlson index, and Medicare comorbidity tier system. The c-statistic was the primary measure of model performance. Main Outcome Measures We investigated 3-, 7-, and 30-day readmission to acute care hospitals from inpatient rehabilitation facilities. Results Basic Model c-statistics predicting 3-, 7-, and 30-day readmissions were 0.69, 0.64, and 0.65, respectively. The best-performing Basic Plus Model (Basic+Elixhauser) c-statistics were only 0.02 better than the Basic Model, and the best-performing Gender-Comorbidity Model (Gender+Elixhauser) c-statistics were more than 0.07 worse than the Basic Model. Conclusions Readmission models based on functional status consistently outperform models based on medical comorbidities. There is opportunity to improve current national readmission risk models to more accurately predict readmissions by incorporating functional data.
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ISSN:0884-8734
1525-1497
1525-1497
DOI:10.1007/s11606-015-3350-2