Keywords

Care transitions, coordination, information sharing, post-acute care

 

Authors

  1. Cross, Dori A.
  2. Hogan, Tory H.
  3. Adler-Milstein, Julia

Abstract

Background: Skilled nursing facilities' (SNFs) ability to provide optimal post-acute care depends on effective receipt of information from hospitals ("information continuity"). Little is known about how SNFs perceive information continuity and how it may relate to upstream information sharing processes, organizational context, and downstream outcomes.

 

Purpose: First, this study aims to identify how SNF perceptions of information continuity may be shaped by hospital information sharing practices, including measures of completeness, timeliness, and usability, as well as characteristics of the transitional care environment (i.e., integrated care relationships and/or consistency of information sharing practices across different hospital partners). Second, we analyze which of these characteristics are associated with quality of transitional care (measured by 30-day readmissions).

 

Approach: A cross-sectional analysis of nationally representative SNF survey (N = 212) linked to Medicare claims was performed.

 

Results: SNF perceptions of information continuity are strongly and positively associated with hospital information sharing practices. Adjusting for actual information sharing practices, SNFs that experienced discordance across hospitals reported lower perceptions of continuity ([beta] = -0.73, p = .022); evidence of stronger relationships with a given hospital partner appears to help facilitate resources and communication that helps to close this gap. Perceptions of information continuity, more so than the upstream information sharing processes reported, exhibited a more reliable and significant association with rates of readmissions as an indicator of transitional care quality.

 

Conclusion: SNF perceptions of information continuity are strongly associated with patient outcomes and are reflective of both hospital information sharing practices as well as characteristics of the transitional care environment that can mitigate or amplify the cognitive and administration challenge of their work.

 

Practice Implications: Improving transitional care quality requires that hospitals improve information sharing behaviors but also invest in capacity for learning and process improvement in the SNF environment.