Journal of Hospital Administration | 2019

Interventions to address medication-related causes of hospital readmissions: A scoping review

 
 
 

Abstract


Unplanned readmissions pose a tremendous burden on patients, providers, and payers. \xa0A significant proportion of readmissions are medication-related. \xa0Despite the availability of literature regarding hospital-level strategies to reduce readmissions, little has been written about strategies aimed at medication-related readmissions. \xa0We sought to identify successful readmission reduction strategies by performing a scoping literature review of research published between 2000 and 2017. \xa0We identified 21 studies that met our inclusion criteria. \xa0From these studies, we identified 7 components frequently employed as a part of interventions to reduce medication-related readmissions: discharge planning, discharge education, post-discharge telephone calls, the use of a professional coordinator with clinical training to administer the intervention, patient education efforts, provider training efforts, and medication reconciliation. \xa0Thirty-eight percent of all the interventions identified were associated with a statistically significant reduction in readmissions. \xa0Of the 7 common intervention components we identified, none were consistently associated with intervention success in the full sample. \xa0However, interventions implemented by inpatient hospitals, in particular academic medical centers, had a higher success rate than interventions implemented by other providers. We examined a subsample of larger studies and found that discharge planning and medication reconciliation components were included in most of the successful interventions. \xa0Future research should look beyond simply identifying components included in an intervention and should instead seek to identify contextual factors that enable or inhibit the success of these components. \xa0Research examining discharge planning and medication reconciliation efforts will be particularly important.

Volume 8
Pages 10
DOI 10.5430/JHA.V8N4P10
Language English
Journal Journal of Hospital Administration

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