Medical CareLong-Term Acute Care Facilities Not Always the Best Choice By Jane Farrell For older adults recovering from hospitalization for a severe, complex illness, there may be other, less expensive options besides long-term acute care (LTAC) facilities, researchers say.Only about half of older adults are transferred to LTACs for reasons related to the severity or complexity of their illnesses. For the other half, hospital preferences and regional trends often influence whether more cost-effective options are chosen, researchers in the University of Texas Southwestern’s Center for Patient-Centered Outcomes Research (PCOR) found.“We found that many older adults are being sent to LTACs based on the preference of hospital providers and regional availability, when they may potentially be cared for as effectively in other, less expensive post-acute care settings, such as skilled nursing facilities,” said lead author Dr. Anil Makam, Assistant Professor of Internal Medicine at UT Southwestern Medical CenterPost-acute care is the single largest increase in and source of variation in Medicare spending nationally, and LTACs are the fastest growing and most expensive type of post-acute care. Researchers hope the findings, published in JAMA Internal Medicine, highlight an opportunity to improve healthcare value by prompting doctors to consider transferring less ill patients to high-quality skilled nursing facilities that can still offer an appropriate and effective level of care.The study, based on national Medicare data from 2010 to 2012, also showed that certain regions of the country have far higher rates of LTAC use, in part because of differences in long-term acute care availability.“The extreme regional differences in long-term acute care use across the country suggest that there is overuse of LTACs in the South, including the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex, and possibly underuse of LTACs in the Pacific Northwest, the North, and the North Northeast. Nonetheless, geography is not entirely destiny, since hospitals located within the same region use LTACs very differently,” Makam said.Despite these findings, more research is needed to better understand when an LTAC versus a skilled nursing facility is the best option for individual patients.“A key challenge is that no one knows what the right rate of LTAC use is, or even who the right person is to transfer to an LTAC,” Makam said, according to a news release from UT Southwestern. “There are some people who we know clearly benefit from long-term acute care services, such as those recovering from certain critical illnesses, but there are also a lot of gray areas that we’re not sure about. It is critical that we understand which individuals are most likely to benefit from LTACs for post-acute care so that we can make the smartest decisions about how to best use these resources to help older adults recover.”Share this: