The New Frontier of Healthcare: Bringing Hospital Care Home

Health Data Management | By Fred Bazzoli

Like many “new” trends in healthcare, the hospital at home movement is not new. The foundational research goes back nearly 30 years, to work by Bruce Leff, MD, of Johns Hopkins to flesh out the concept of providing acute-level care to patients in their own homes.

It seems to harken back to the notion of doctors carrying black bags into patients’ homes to do house calls, but multiple advances in technologies and trends in healthcare have thrust hospital at home programs to the forefront.

When those pressures converge, change happens. And providing hospital services in the home is gaining new attention.

Provider Realities

From the hospital side, several factors are forcing providers to get creative. Census levels are high nationwide, often near full capacity and beyond. Staff rolls are shrinking as growing numbers of clinicians quit because of burnout or unmitigated stress. There’s not enough money to build new brick-and-mortar facilities. And then, lordy, there was the pandemic – many organizations had a crash course in virtual care, forced by restrictions on in-person encounters, full COVID caseloads and nearly instantaneous changes in reimbursement policy that enabled virtual care.

And patients – well, they weren’t big fans of being in the hospital before. The pandemic opened their eyes to the possibility of virtual care, and nascent hospital-at-home programs revealed alternatives to traditional delivery of acute care services.

As one chronic care patient told Leff in his early formulation of a hospital at home strategy, “You run a great hospital, doc, but it’s a lousy hotel.” Factor in the risks of hospital-acquired infections, falls as unsteady patients exit unaccompanied from hospital beds, loneliness and disorientation in a strange clinical environment, harried hands-on caregivers managing multiple patients and … well, it’s clear that an alternative would be welcome.

And inpatient facilities are in no position to fix these ills. Capacity is strained at many hospitals, says Colleen Hole, vice president of clinical integration and chief nurse executive for Atrium Health Medical Group. “Our hospitals are running at 110 percent to 120 percent occupancy in this market,” she says. “And Charlotte is a growing market, and we really can’t afford nor spend the time to keep building brick-and-mortar beds to manage the growth. Money and time are precious, and it doesn’t make sense to keep building beds. But we can deliver hospital-level care in the home and with the same – or in some cases, better – outcomes.”…

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