Overview
Hospitalization is a critical metric that shows up in numerous places in Marketscape. In the most general terms, a hospitalization event is when a patient is admitted to a hospital during a post-acute stay or within 30 days after discharge from post-acute care. The exact meaning of a specific hospitalization metric, and how it is calculated, could be different depending on where the metric resides in Marketscape.
The different hospitalization metrics have different names. If the names match between two different locations in Marketscape, the metric is the same.
As always, similar metrics in different tables might be different numbers or percentages because they tell different stories based on the context. Our analytics are designed to help you make decisions based on the content of each different story. Or, if you like, each table provides a specific perspective on a provider. When you look at the same provider from the different perspective of another table, what you see regarding a specific metric might be different. For this reason, metrics that are similar might not match between different tables. This is especially important to remember in the case of hospitalization metrics that we have sliced a number of different ways.
There are four different Hospitalization rates in Marketscape for Skilled Nursing:
- Hospitalization Rate: Stay + 30 days - a patient is hospitalized during a SNF stay or within 30 days of discharge from SNF care. For the details, click here.
- Trended Hospitalization Rate - a patient is hospitalized during a SNF stay or within 30 days of discharge from SNF care. This metric is calculated on a one year reporting period ending in the quarter listed in each column. For the details, click here.
- Hospitalization Rate: SOC to 30 days - a patient is counted as hospitalized if the admission occurs within 30 days of SNF health start of care. For the details, click here.
- Hospitalization Rate: SOC to 90 days - a patient is counted as hospitalized if the admission occurs within 90 days of SNF health start of care. For the details, click here.
In this article we refer to PAC or post-acute care. PAC could refer to SNF, home health, or hospice care. How the metrics for each are calculated is similar, so the more generic term is used to facilitate ease of understanding across the different lines of business.
Usage
Excellent post-acute care should impact overall patient care by keeping patients out of the hospital. The spread of hospitalization metrics available in Marketscape will allow you to evaluate your own agency's performance against state and county benchmarks. In addition, you can see how you stack up against your competitors in many tables.
To find your competitors, you will need to perform a competitive analysis. For more information on how to perform a competitive analysis, click here.
Calculation Basics
In all of the hospitalization metrics, the calculations are similar. At the most basic, it is the number of patients hospitalized during a post-acute stay or within 30 days after discharge divided by the total number of patients admitted to the post-acute agency, times 100%.
The equation looks like this:
Differences in how we calculate each count, numerator and/or denominator is what differentiates the spread of hospitalization metrics. Those differences are described for each metric below for each metric.
State and County Benchmarks
In many locations there are state and county benchmarks for comparison. These are calculated for all similar post-acute agencies in either the state or county, using the same equation as for the specific agency on the page, or in the table.
Hospitalization Rate: Stay + 30 Days
Where to find it
Explore page for Physicians > Destinations/Sources Preview
Click on next to a physician's name to show SNF destinations.
HERE
Understanding the Metric
This is our broadest view of hospitalization in Marketscape. For an event to be a hospitalization, the patient would need to be admitted to inpatient care during a post-acute stay or in the 30 days following post-acute discharge.
Any Length of Stay - We calculate this metric on a stay of any length in part to distinguish this metric from readmission rates that have a fixed 30 day period. Other issues to consider:
- In many cases, an admission to inpatient care from post-acute care triggers/requires a discharge from the post-acute stay. The exception is a home health transfer where the episode/stay continues. When a discharge does occur, we count the event as a hospitalization, and the 30 days post discharge don't apply.
- In the case of a patient who is discharged from post-acute care, we then consider that stay/event a hospitalization if the patient is admitted to inpatient care within 30 days of post-acute discharge.
Trended Hospitalization Rate
Where to find it
SNF Analyze Page > Quality > Hospitalization Rate (12 Month Rolling) table
Understanding the Metric
This metric is calculated the same way as Hospitalization Rate: Stay + 30 Days.
There are two differences:
- The reporting period for the trended metrics is one year instead of two.
- The reporting period for each quarter ends in the quarter listed. See image for how the reporting period is adjusted.
In this image, we only show reporting periods for the two most recent quarters. The previous quarters would extend further to the left, that is, into earlier quarters.
Hospitalization Rate: SOC to 30 days
Where to find it
SNF Analyze Page > Quality > Hospitalization Rates within 30 Days from Start of Care
Understanding the Metric
This metric is our most restricted hospitalization rate. To be counted as a hospitalization, we identify patients who were admitted to inpatient care within 30 days of SNF start of care.
We count the admission as a hospitalization even if the patient was discharged from the SNF prior to the inpatient admission.
Hospitalization Rate: SOC to 90 days
Where to find it
Home Health Analyze Page > Quality > Hospitalization Rates within 90 Days from Start of Care
HERE
Understanding the Metric
This metric is identical to the 30 day from start of care metric except that we expand the reference period for inpatient admission to 90 days. To be counted as a hospitalization, we identify patients who were admitted to inpatient care within 90 days of SNF start of care.
We count the admission as a hospitalization even if the patient was discharged from the SNF prior to the inpatient admission.
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