How Can Rural Hospitals Connect to Reduce Readmissions?

With rural hospitals stretched thin for resources, critical access leaders and organizations are getting creative to share solutions and protect patients.

Data-Driven Healthcare Reduces Patient Risk


Data is the lifeblood of healthcare, but data only helps patients if it's put into action by all required parties. Initiatives like I-PASS have demonstrated how significant of an impact simple communication measures can have on enhancing care. For example, by standardizing how providers handed off patient information to other providers, I-PASS decreased patient injuries by 30 percent. But what happens when patients leave the facility? Here’s how hospitals can connect with outsiders to build an ecosystem that protects patients.

cherokee_regional_medical_center

Rural hospitals receive far fewer resources than larger facilities and can struggle to meet the requirements of accrediting bodies. According to the AHA, 136 rural hospitals closed from 2010 to 2021, with low reimbursement and regulatory obstacles being the primary drivers of closures. As such, encouraging efforts like the Acute Hospital at Home model provide an optimistic way forward for these facilities. Pioneered by Illiniois-based hospital Blessing Health, along with three other facilities, they tested a combination of telehealth and in-person care tools to bring critical care to patients’ houses. According to Healthleaders, administrators integrated all the care tools on a digital platform developed by Biofourmis.

 

The new program improved care and put less strain on critical access hospitals. Acute Hospital at Home lowered cost per patient by 38 percent while reducing rehospitalizations and testing costs. At the same time, the conductors of the study, Brigham and Woman’s, noted increased patient activity levels. Despite the promising results, administrators said they would proceed cautiously with the program after concluding its trial run. They stated that convincing patients to be treated at home proved challenging.

The Kansas Healthcare Collaborative

Home to 105 rural hospitals, the Kansas healthcare system faced challenges communicating care information and getting resources to critical access facilities. Malea Hartvickson, the Kansas Healthcare Collaborative Executive Director (KHC), told Medplace that Kansas’s facilities suffered from siloed information and struggled to convey solutions to risk to one another, leading to patient readmissions. As a result, the KHC helped these critical access facilities share tools that reduce risk. 

 

backquote image

We provide policies, procedures, workflows, and technical assistance. If you need something that we don't have, we'll work with you to come up with something that fits your practice or your hospital.

These tools include medication hand-off standardization, best safety practices for care environments, patient social networks, referrals to social services, and even partnering with local fire departments for reduced risk in at-home care. Hartvickson mentioned that a COVID-19 vaccine confidence kit is the next priority for KHC.

 

The outcome of efforts like the Kansas Healthcare Collaborative speaks for itself. Using their set of tools, KHC lowered A1C in their diabetic patients and reduced the readmissions in their chronic care program to one.

Expanding Rural Hospital Telehealth Coverage

Although telehealth is poised to address inequities in access to care, many rural communities do not have access to broadband internet. Telehealth, which includes video e-visits, remote patient monitoring, and web-based mobile health, requires a high-speed internet connection of at least 25 MB/s. With 85% of physicians surveyed by the AMA responding that they want to increase telehealth usage, rural patients face a widening gap in access to care. Fortunately, healthcare leaders and agencies are stepping in to prevent growing inequities.

 

As a result, several healthcare-affiliated organizations are exploring solutions to eliminate the gap between rural and urban communities. For example, the National Digital Inclusion Alliance provides a directory of partners that offer inexpensive or free technology training. Others, like Public Health Innovators, facilitate partnerships between care facilities and technology organizations to develop equitable deployment of tech resources.

 

However, healthcare leaders may need more resources, creative solutions, and time to realize a future of truly equitable care. As of 2021, only 72 percent of rural Americans say they have a broadband connection at home. Federal measures like the Affordable Connectivity Program offer an exciting stopgap solution for some rural patients. Still, robust internet infrastructure is the only way to ensure that telehealth patients can get the care they need.

 

For information on how Medplace connects rural facilities with top medical experts for peer review and improves patient safety, schedule a demo here. 

I'm Interested in External Peer Review

Complete the form to schedule a demo or request an expert.

protected by reCAPTCHA
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Jerrod Bailey

Jerrod Bailey is the CEO of Medplace, an app built for healthcare, legal, and insurance industries to streamline their case and peer review processes. He holds over 20 years of experience in venture-backed technology companies and specializes in healthcare technology development and human-centered user experience design. Jerrod has helped launch over 100 technology start-ups, including corporate new ventures with American Express, Intel, and other notable names.

Everything You Need to Know About Improving Medical Peer Review

This guide will help explain everything you need to know about improving Medical Peer Review.

Read More
November 20, 2023

2 Ways to Standardize Your Peer Review Process

Here's how to standardize your hospital's peer review process with clinical guidelines and data collection.

Read More
October 13, 2023

Tips for Doctors Navigating Medical Peer Review

So, you've been selected to either conduct or be reviewed by a peer at your hospital. Here is what you need to know.

Read More
October 10, 2023

Get started in minutes.