Revisit rates and associated costs after an emergency department encounter: a multistate analysis.

2015
https://researcherprofiles.org/profile/1192231
26030633
Duseja R, Bardach NS, Lin GA, Yazdany J, Dean ML, Clay TH, Boscardin WJ, Dudley RA
Abstract

BACKGROUND

Return visits to the emergency department (ED) or hospital after an index ED visit strain the health system, but information about rates and determinants of revisits is limited.

OBJECTIVE

To describe revisit rates, variation in revisit rates by diagnosis and state, and associated costs.

DESIGN

Observational study using the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project databases.

SETTING

6 U.S. states.

PATIENTS

Adults with ED visits between 2006 and 2010.

MEASUREMENTS

Revisit rates and costs.

RESULTS

Within 3 days of an index ED visit, 8.2% of patients had a revisit; 32% of those revisits occurred at a different institution. Revisit rates varied by diagnosis, with skin infections having the highest rate (23.1% [95% CI, 22.3% to 23.9%]). Revisit rates also varied by state. For skin infections, Florida had higher risk-adjusted revisit rates (24.8% [CI, 23.5% to 26.2%]) than Nebraska (10.6% [CI, 9.2% to 12.1%]). In Florida, the only state with complete cost data, total revisit costs for the 19.8% of patients with a revisit within 30 days were 118% of total index ED visit costs for all patients (including those with and without a revisit).

LIMITATION

Whether a revisit reflects inadequate access to primary care, a planned revisit, the patient's nonadherence to ED recommendations, or poor-quality care at the initial ED visit remains unknown.

CONCLUSION

Revisits after an index ED encounter are more frequent than previously reported, in part because many occur outside the index institution. Among ED patients in Florida, more resources are spent on revisits than on index ED visits.

PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

Journal Issue
Volume 162 of Issue 11