4.6 Article

The patient-driven payment model: A missed opportunity for patient-centered cancer care

期刊

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY
卷 69, 期 11, 页码 3267-3272

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jgs.17458

关键词

cancer; health policy; rehabilitation; skilled nursing facility

资金

  1. National Palliative Care Junior Faculty Career Development Award

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Hospitalized older cancer patients discharged to skilled nursing facilities for rehabilitation often do not receive future cancer treatment, have high readmission rates, and face high mortality with minimal hospice use. The new patient-driven payment model for SNFs may impact their experience, highlighting the importance of access to palliative care and discussing challenges in developing palliative care guidelines and delivery models in SNFs. There are policy gaps in creating a system that achieves high-quality SNF care, and suggestions are offered to better incorporate a patient's illness trajectory, prognosis, and goals of care.
Hospitalized older patients with advanced cancer who were discharged to a skilled nursing facility (SNF) for rehabilitation are unlikely to receive future cancer treatment, have high 30-day readmission rates, and high mortality yet minimal hospice use. The Medicare SNF benefit was designed to be a bridge and provide short-term nursing and rehabilitation care for patients after a hospitalization. However, advanced cancer patients churn through the health system cycling between the hospital, post-acute care facilities, and home in the last months of life. This article explores the potential impact of the patient-driven payment model, a new SNF reimbursement model introduced by the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services in 2019, on the experience of older cancer patients. Previously, SNF reimbursement was based on the hours of rehabilitative therapy provided to patients, unintentionally incentivizing SNFs to provide more therapy resulting in long lengths of stay and increased Medicare expenditure. The new patient-driven payment model bases reimbursement on patient clinical characteristics and resources utilized during their SNF stay. We discuss the impact this payment model might have on cancer patients in the SNF setting and highlight the importance of access to palliative care for this population. We discuss challenges policymakers face in creating palliative care guidelines and developing palliative care delivery models in SNFs. We highlight the policy gaps that remain in creating a system that achieves high-quality SNF care and conclude by offering suggestions that might better incorporate a patient's illness trajectory, prognosis, and goals of care.

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