By marrying social determinants of health with quality data, a Vizient Member Networks Performance Improvement Program collaborative illuminates innovative practices to improve hospital length of stay and cost savings.
Managing high-risk patient transitions after discharge from the hospital is a growing challenge, especially with
workforce shortages and capacity constraints. And a growing senior population combined with more adults living with
chronic illness increasingly necessitates more — and better — post-acute services.
“Transitions from hospital to post-acute care is both time consuming and complex. For example, when discharge tasks such as exercise oximetry tests are not coordinated and stack up on the patient’s last day, any disruption can cause a cascade of negative events such as delays in discharge, post-acute treatments and subsequent readmissions,” said Margaret Rudisill, performance improvement senior director at Vizient. “In fact, up to 30% of all hospital admissions have a 24-hour discharge delay due to nonclinical reasons.”
As part of ongoing work to address hospital capacity constraints, the Vizient Member Networks Performance Improvement
Programs recently focused on these patients and completed a collaborative Creating Capacity: Transitioning of
High-Risk Patients Collaborative with 39 member organizations. They focused on the top 2% of their utilizers,
marrying data from the Vizient Clinical Data
Base with the Vizient Vulnerability
Index™ to identify which social
determinants of health (SDOH) these patients struggle with.
“We know that SDOH such as housing instability, food insecurity, transportation barriers and limited access to
educational opportunities and employment significantly influence individuals’ health outcomes,” said Heather
Blonsky, lead data scientist at Vizient. “By screening for these factors, healthcare providers can gain a more
comprehensive understanding of patients' lives beyond their medical conditions. This holistic approach allows for
tailored interventions that address the root causes of health disparities.”
The six-month collaborative that began in 2024 — one of four collaboratives focused on capacity in the last two
years
— engaged the healthcare organizations to implement leading practices, such as creating specialized care teams
and
addressing SDOH, which collectively resulted in a 4.7% reduction in mean length of stay (LOS), avoidance of 198,000
inpatient days and $317 million in annualized costs.
Identifying those at risk
One collaborative participant, a 600-bed academic medical center with a specialized oncology unit located in the
Northeast, focused on reducing LOS for oncology patients. Incorporating the Vizient Vulnerability Index™, they
created a novel LOS predictor tool to identify hematologic oncology patients at risk for prolonged days.
By leveraging the Vizient Clinical Data Base LOS methodology and Observed/Expected index, they achieved a reduction
in LOS from 1.27 to 0.97 following implementation of strategies to better identify and manage these high-risk
patients. Strategies included, streamlined admissions and a transition care team that bridged coordinated patient
care such as the use of American Cancer Society housing for patients in need and standardized care pathways through
discharge and beyond. In fact, using interdisciplinary rounds, medication reconciliation and expanded home health
options, they achieved an 85% discharge home health rate.
“The sooner healthcare organizations identify and screen for SDOH as part of identifying patient needs, the sooner
they can provide more coordinated care that impacts the chronic disease prevalence of patients, their behavioral
health and overall life expectancy,” Rudisill said.
Palliative care
Palliative care that focuses on relieving symptoms and improving quality of life for both the patient and their
family is an important but often overlooked service. One participating academic health system in the Midwest began
work with an external hospice agency to enable their in-house palliative care team to provide services to more
patients. They also changed workflows to support early intervention for patients with known severe illness.
Other successful strategies by several organizations included enlisting key palliative care champions, providing
education to all providers about palliative care and what constitutes a patient’s eligibility for a consultation,
and providing palliative care consultations within 24 hours of a patient’s arrival, which may occur in the ED.
“Those patients who are screened for palliative care services on hospital day one are more likely to improve and have
a shorter length of stay overall,” Rudisill said. “Additionally palliative care teams maximize hospital efficiency
and lower costs.”
Dedicated post-acute care champion
Transitions from one care setting to another or to the home are one of the most vulnerable times for patients. They
are more likely to experience adverse events that lead to poor outcomes, which in turn result in significant
financial losses for healthcare organizations. Additionally, a myriad of other factors can delay timely discharges.
For example, finding available skilled nursing facilities, insurance authorizations and family decision-making
around choice contribute to over 80% in excess days.
However, many of the collaborative participants shared successes amplified by a dedicated professional such as a
post-acute care liaison, transition specialist and/or discharge navigator in their organizations. They’re able to
collaborate with care delivery teams to enhance patient access to providers, promote home health services, and serve
as a liaison between the health system and acute care organizations to establish shared goals for post-acute care
utilization.
“Complex patients require the care of complex teams,” Rudisill said. “These liaisons are important members of a
coordinated team — including physicians, nurses, geriatricians, social workers and palliative care
representatives —
and are crucial for creating post-acute relationships and resources to ensure a smooth discharge for those patients
transitioning to post-acute care and those who are going home.”