Home care program aimed at patient health, Medicare crack down
| By Matt M. Johnson, The Bradenton Herald | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
Infinity
He was in such bad shape that his doctors told his wife, Dolly, he wouldn't survive the night.
"We thought we were going to lose him," she said.
Trace survived, and then went through rehab at the hospital and in
Today, Trace can walk up and down the block without a walker. He carries a cane in his hand that he never uses. Infinity therapists coached him through a rigorous home exercise program to get him to this point.
It's the hardest he's worked in years.
"I was doing what I thought was sufficient," said Trace, formerly a semi-regular bike rider. "But I wasn't."
Responding to
Much as in Trace's case, Infinity is sending nurses and other health professionals into client homes to teach them how to take care of their own health after major health events such as heart failure, heart attacks and pneumonia. The company developed the program late last year as
Infinity's program taps into a good line of business as hospitals like Manatee Memorial try to avoid those readmissions. It also gets Infinity ahead of the curve in how it provides rehabilitation services.
The company is currently paid to work with patients on 60-day cycles, but Abbott sees that changing in the near future. As
Abbott said cases like Trace's are the ideal result. Her company designed the patient empowerment program late last year in response to
A typical result for patients like Trace would have been one or more emergency trips back to the hospital in the months following rehab, Abbott said. Those trips would have occurred after a patient failed to keep up with medications, weight goals, exercise, or to properly monitor disease symptoms.
Older rehab models relied on a telemonitor system, under which patients were taught to use a computer system to monitor blood pressure, weight and other vitals. That information was used by Infinity to guide rehab. But when the rented system left a patient's home at the end of rehab, no one -- including the patient -- continued to monitor these factors along any sort of structure.
"All you really did was make a patient dependent on a piece of machinery," Abbott said.
Patients get new tools
The new program teaches patients to use what they have at home to monitor their health. For example, a patient might learn to use a blood pressure cuff and a scale, then to track those results.
During his home rehab, Trace has tracked his exercise, weight, diet, medication and other vital statistics in a 44-page journal Infinity provides its clients. It's something he will continue to do after rehab.
Central to the program is goal setting. Abbott said clients are asked to set a goal for their recovery, whether it be walking to the mailbox or getting on a plane to visit relatives. Trace's goal is to get back behind the wheel of his car. He hasn't yet, but he said he will be driving again soon.
Abbott said Infinity expects the program to be used with a large number of its clients. For example, of the 15,000 clients Infinity saw in 2013, 568 had congestive heart failure as a primary or secondary diagnosis.
Dr.
"They do so much better at home," he said. "They're happier, they live longer."
Wilkinson said Infinity's treatment method will likely lead to fewer readmissions, which is good for the patient. Home care, he said, is almost always the preferred treatment for patients recovering from an acute health condition. It's also a money saver.
"It makes more sense to provide care in the home for dollars a day, versus thousands a day in the hospital," Wilkinson said.
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