Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Phys Ther. 2022 Mar 1;102(3). doi: 10.1093/ptj/pzab292.
Multiparticipant physical and occupational therapy provision has fluctuated significantly in skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) under shifts in Medicare reimbursement policy. Multiparticipant therapy includes group (2-6 individuals per therapist) and concurrent therapy (2 individuals per therapist). This study uses recent patient-level data to characterize multiparticipant therapy provision in SNFs to help anticipate shifts under new Medicare policy and the COVID-19 pandemic.
This secondary analysis used data on 1,016,984 post-acute rehabilitation stays in SNFs in 2018. This analysis identified patient predictors (eg, demographic, clinical) and organizational predictors (eg, ownership, quality, staffing) of receiving multiparticipant therapy using mixed-effects logistic regression. Among individuals who received any multiparticipant therapy, those patient or facility factors associated with high rates of multiparticipant therapy provision were also determined.
Less than 3% of individuals received multiparticipant therapy in 2018. Patient functional and cognitive impairment and indicators of market regulation were associated with lower odds of multiparticipant therapy. Effect sizes for organizational factors associated with multiparticipant therapy provision were generally larger compared with patient factors. High multiparticipant therapy provision was concentrated in <2% of SNFs and was positively associated with for-profit ownership, contract staffing, and low 5-star quality ratings.
SNF organizational characteristics tended to have stronger associations with multiparticipant therapy provision than patient factors, suggesting that changes in patient case-mix, as expected during the COVID-19 pandemic, may have less of an impact on multiparticipant therapy provision than organizational factors. Results suggest that for-profit SNFs in states with higher market regulation, SNFs providing high volumes of therapy, and SNFs utilizing high proportions of assistants and contract staff may be more responsive to Medicare policy by increasing multiparticipant therapy provision.
This study may help identify SNFs that are more likely to increase multiparticipant therapy provision under new Medicare payment policy.
医疗保险报销政策的转变导致熟练护理设施(SNF)中的多参与者物理治疗和职业治疗提供情况大幅波动。多参与者治疗包括小组治疗(每位治疗师 2-6 人)和同时治疗(每位治疗师 2 人)。本研究使用最近的患者水平数据来描述 SNF 中的多参与者治疗提供情况,以帮助预测新的医疗保险政策和 COVID-19 大流行下的变化。
本二次分析使用了 2018 年 SNF 中 1,016,984 例康复后住院的数据。该分析使用混合效应逻辑回归确定了接受多参与者治疗的患者预测因素(例如,人口统计学、临床)和组织预测因素(例如,所有权、质量、人员配备)。在接受任何多参与者治疗的个体中,还确定了与多参与者治疗提供率高相关的患者或设施因素。
2018 年,不到 3%的人接受多参与者治疗。患者的功能和认知障碍以及市场监管指标与多参与者治疗的可能性较低相关。与多参与者治疗提供相关的组织因素的效应大小通常大于患者因素。高比例的多参与者治疗集中在不到 2%的 SNF 中,并且与营利性所有权、合同人员配备和低 5 星级质量评级呈正相关。
SNF 组织特征与多参与者治疗提供的关联往往强于患者因素,这表明 COVID-19 大流行期间预计会出现的患者病例组合变化对多参与者治疗提供的影响可能小于组织因素。结果表明,在市场监管程度较高的州,提供大量治疗的营利性 SNF 以及使用大量助理和合同员工的 SNF 可能会通过增加多参与者治疗的提供来对医疗保险政策做出更积极的反应。
本研究可能有助于确定在新的医疗保险支付政策下更有可能增加多参与者治疗提供的 SNF。