It’s no secret that hospital-at-home programs are a rising trend in the healthcare industry. Their lasting success, however, will depend on quality data and the hospital quality departments responsible for documenting, collecting and reporting on it.
Here’s what to know as a quality manager about hospital-at-home programs and where your clinical documentation, data collection and reporting, quality measure, and performance metrics responsibilities will fall along the execution and evaluation of those programs.
Hospital-at-home programs are care delivery models that offer patients the opportunity to safely receive acute-care services typically provided by hospitals on an inpatient basis in their homes. There’s an important distinction to make: it’s not traditional home care, it’s acute care in the home.
Some forward-looking hospitals and health systems have been experimenting with hospital-at-home programs for several years as part of the industry’s overall transition to value-based care models from fee-for-service care models. The idea is hospital-at-home programs can provide clinically eligible patients safe and effective acute-care services at home at a lower cost and do so in a more convenient setting preferred by most patients. Several studies have shown that these hospital-at-home programs accomplish both of these objectives.
But, thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic, the days of a handful of innovative hospitals and health systems tinkering with hospital-at-home models are over. Hospitals and health systems across the country need two things: space in their facilities to treat COVID patients (even those who don’t need intensive care) and the ability to treat non-COVID patients safely at home.
In late November, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services responded to that pressing need by creating its Acute Hospital Care at Home, or AHCAH, waiver program. Essentially, CMS lifted regulatory restrictions that prevented hospitals from providing acute care to patients in their homes. Under the waiver program, hospitals and health systems can now do so if they meet certain conditions.
That’s where quality managers and quality departments come in. It will be their job to ensure hospitals or health systems are meeting AHCAH waiver conditions and consequently proving it with the quality data that is collected and reported to CMS.
Let’s break down clinical documentation requirements and the quality data that needs to be collected and documented in three phases: before, during and after a patient’s hospital-at-home episode of care.
Just to be clear before we begin, this is a voluntary program and all requirements we review below are not part of your hospital IQR, OQR or any other value-based care program.
The information that needs to be documented in the patient’s medical record falls into four domains:
The documentation of the above criteria likely will be done by physicians, nurses and other licensed care professionals. These are not traditional quality reporting requirements that would require chart abstraction or eCQM data submissions. That said, some of the data in that documentation may be used for quality improvement or performance measures purposes at a later point.
Now this is where it gets interesting—and challenging.
How do you replicate inpatient care in the home in terms of monitoring by doctors, nurses and other clinicians? CMS’ answer is this: A registered nurse must evaluate a patient at home once a day (either in person or remotely). An RN or paramedic must also physically visit an at-home patient at least twice a day.
That means the RNs and the paramedics must document those at-home evaluations and visits in the patient’s medical record. This can be done on-site using mobile devices or shortly afterwards in an EHR system. Per CMS, EHR clinical documentation “should be consistent with existing hospital policies for inpatient admissions.”
That’s critical because the data from those patients’ medical records is needed to assemble the hospital-at-home quality measures that are reported to CMS. Those measures fall into five domains:
Oh, and one other thing: If a hospital is what CMS calls an “inexperienced hospital,” or one that’s treated fewer than 25 acute-care patients at home, quality measures must be reported weekly. If a hospital is categorized as an “experienced hospital,” or one that’s treated 25 or more acute-care patient at home, quality measures can be reported on a monthly basis.
And, of course, the data that qualifies your hospital as inexperienced or experienced must also be reported.
The clinical documentation and quality data elements extracted from that documentation will give a quality manager and quality department the capability to determine how well a hospital-at-home program is working in terms of costs and outcomes.
For now, CMS hasn’t determined what hospital-at-home performance measures to track. But, several hospital-at-home case studies and peer-reviewed pieces of published research suggest a few to consider if participating in the AHCAH waiver program.
In this case study of the hospital-at-home program operated by Presbyterian Healthcare Services in Albuquerque, N.M., published by The Commonwealth Fund, the health system used the following performance measures to compare its hospital-at-home outcomes with its inpatient care outcomes:
In this original research published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, researchers evaluated the hospital-at-home program operated by Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston using these metrics:
And in this study published in JAMA Internal Medicine, researchers used the following metrics to evaluate the hospital-at-home program operated by the Mount Sinai Health System in New York:
Whatever measures your hospital decides to use to monitor the performance of your hospital-at-home program and use for quality-improvement purposes, the task will fall on quality managers to collect the data to build those measures and report them internally and, at some point, externally to payers like Medicare.
The transition to value-based care accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic has pushed the idea of hospital-at-home programs to the front of the line in new care models. These new programs will be fueled by data and the ability of you and your quality department to collect and report it. The time to prepare for an expanded role beyond the four walls of your hospital is now.
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