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Hospital readmission among Medicaid patients with an index hospitalization for mental and/or substance use disorder
Smoyer Tomic, K., Kowlessar, N., Chu, B. C., Vandivort-Warren, R., Smith, S., & Mark, T. (2013). Hospital readmission among Medicaid patients with an index hospitalization for mental and/or substance use disorder. Journal of Behavioral Health Services and Research, 40(2), 207-221. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11414-013-9323-5
Hospital readmission rates are increasingly used as a performance indicator. Whether they are a valid, reliable, and actionable measure for behavioral health is unknown. Using the MarketScan Multistate Medicaid Claims Database, this study examined hospital- and patient-level predictors of behavioral health readmission rates. Among hospitals with at least 25 annual admissions, the median behavioral health readmission rate was 11% (10th percentile, 3%; 90th percentile, 18%). Increased follow-up at community mental health centers was associated with lower probabilities of readmission, although follow-up with other types of providers was not significantly associated with hospital readmissions. Hospital average length of stay was positively associated with lower readmission rates; however, the effect size was small. Patients with a prior inpatient stay, a substance use disorder, psychotic illness, and medical comorbidities were more likely to be readmitted. Additional research is needed to further understand how the provision of inpatient services and post-discharge follow-up influence readmissions.