Do Skilled Nursing Facilities That Provide More Rehabilitation Therapy Have Lower Rehospitalization Rates?
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
This study examines whether skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) that consistently provided more rehabilitation therapy than other SNFs had lower 30-day rehospitalization rates. A cross-sectional analysis of 11 866 SNFs in the United States compared 30-day rehospitalization rates of SNFs that consistently provided more rehabilitation therapy to other SNFs using linear regression models. High-billing SNFs were defined as the 10% of SNFs with the highest proportions of Medicare fee-for-service claims that just surpassed the therapy minute threshold for the highest payment category. After controlling for patient and facility characteristics, high-billing SNFs had higher 30-day rehospitalization rates as well as longer median length of stay and greater mean cost per stay. Small reductions in the amount of therapy provided are unlikely to increase 30-day rehospitalization rates in SNFs. This has important consequences for the recently implemented patient-driven payment model, which incentivizes SNFs to provide less rehabilitation therapy.