Underserved populations, such those in as rural and low-income communities, often have higher concentrations of patients with multiple medical comorbidities.1 Patients with comorbidities are also disproportionately susceptible to developing acute respiratory distress syndrome, a leading cause of respiratory failure.2
Ensuring that patients with respiratory failure have timely access to Kindred Hospitals, which provides physician-led long-term acute care and rehabilitation to medically complex patients, can improve outcomes for this vulnerable patient population, as well as decrease inpatient length of stay and readmissions.
Respiratory Failure Recovery at Kindred Hospitals
Respiratory failure is a potentially fatal condition that often has a complex recovery path. The average length of stay for patients with respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation is 10.5 days, and the mean 30-day readmission rate for respiratory failure is 21%.3,4 However, Kindred Hospitals has been able to achieve quality outcomes and reduce readmissions for respiratory failure patients.
At Kindred, 86% of patients on ventilators reach a high level of mobility, based on the Johns Hopkins Highest Level of Mobility Scale.5 Kindred has also achieved a 13% readmission rate for respiratory failure and ventilator-supported pulmonary diagnoses compared with the average readmission rate of 21% at referring hospitals and 26% at skilled nursing facilities.6
Initiatives that have contributed to Kindred Hospitals’ quality outcomes include:
Length of Stay and Cost Implications of Early Discharge to Kindred
Because our specialized hospitals offer intensive care unit-level care, stable patients can be transferred to a Kindred Hospital while they are still in critical condition, shortening their inpatient lengths of stay.
Considering the average cost of an initial inpatient stay for respiratory failure patients on mechanical ventilation is $158,443, such strategies to shorten episodes of care can have a significant financial impact.3
Early transfer of patients with respiratory failure to Kindred Hospitals, therefore, can both reduce costs and improve outcomes for a vulnerable patient population.
To learn more about how Kindred Hospitals can help patients with respiratory failure recover, visit kindredoutcomes.com.
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