In national Medicare data for the study period spanning 2008 through 2016, there were 3.7 million hospitalizations for heart failure and 1.6 million hospitalizations for myocardial infarction among Medicare beneficiaries 65 years of age and older. During the same time span, concurrent with a reduction in 30-day readmission rates, 30-day observation stays and visits to the ED increased across all conditions included in the HRRP. The use of observation units and the ED also increased beyond the post-discharge 30-day period.
We found that among conditions targeted in the HRRP, patients with heart failure, but not those with myocardial infarction, experienced an increase in post-discharge 30-day mortality. However, this increase preceded the announcement of the program and was concentrated among individuals who sought no post-discharge acute care. Among those not seeking post-discharge care, a rising proportion had been discharged to hospice. Indeed, half of the deceased who had not sought post-discharge care had been discharged to hospice. Therefore, it appears that the increasing utilization of observation units and the ED in the post-discharge period for patients with heart failure is not the mediator of the rise in post-discharge 30-day mortality in this patient population. Rather, the increasing post-discharge mortality in high-risk heart failure patients occurred in those who did not seek any post-discharge care, many of whom appear to have been appropriately transitioned to hospice care at hospital discharge.