Jordan Stohler, a 42-year-old nurse in Knoxville, TN, was readmitted to Fort Sanders Medical Center in June 2023 with sepsis after a double mastectomy.Â
She spent 5 days in the hospital after surgery to clear up the infection. Then she was offered a choice: She could either stay in the hospital while she received IV antibiotics, or she could go home and have the antibiotics given to her there under the Advanced Care at Home program of Covenant Health, the nine-hospital system to which Fort Sanders belongs.
She opted to go home, where she knew sheâd be more comfortable and would be close to her beloved dog. In the end, she was very glad she did.Â
âI received great care in the hospital, but to be allowed to be in the comfort of your own home, to be around my dog, who I think is therapeutic, to be able to cook my own meals, and to have the same one-on-one nursing care that I would have gotten in the hospital was great,â Stohler said. â
Being cared for at home helped her heal, she said. âI probably would have gotten a little stir crazy if Iâd stayed in the hospital any longer. I received excellent care at home.â
Covenantâs Advanced Care at Home program is an example of the hospital-at-home trend that has been growing rapidly since Medicare began reimbursing hospitals for this approach during the COVID pandemic. Currently, 322 hospitals in 37 states have Medicare waivers for these kinds of programs, although not all of them are currently functioning.
A recent survey published in The Journal of the American Medical Association found that nearly half of consumers would accept hospital-at-home, and more than a third were neutral on it. Only 17% said theyâd rather be cared for in a brick-and-mortar hospital.Â
The findings of the JAMA survey confirm those of earlier studies, said Bruce Leff, MD, a professor at Johns Hopkins Medical School in Baltimore, who has researched hospital-at-home since the 1990s. Like the new study, those trials found that the results had no relationship to individual traits, such as socioeconomic status, medical conditions, age, gender, or race.
Whether a person felt comfortable with the idea of hospital-at-home boiled down âto a preference for receiving care at home or in the hospital,â he said. Some people distrust hospitals, and others feel insecure about receiving care at home, even if it is provided by qualified health care professionals.
How Patients Are SelectedÂ
While the details of hospital-at-home vary from program to program, the basic scenario is that patients who need certain kinds of acute care can be sent home from hospitals, emergency departments, or clinics to receive that care at home. Among the kinds of conditions that make stable patients eligible are heart failure, COPD, pneumonia, cellulitis, and COVID-19, said John Busigin, MD, a hospitalist and medical director of Covenant Advanced Care at Home.Â
When a patient is admitted to hospital-at-home, the hospital will send along whatever equipment and medications that person needs. In some cases, this may include a hospital bed, although Stohler used her own. An IV line was put into her arm, and the IV stand was placed next to the bed.Â
Will Hospital-at-Home Go Mainstream?
webmd.com
July 30, 2024 10:02 am
Jordan Stohler, a 42-year-old nurse in Knoxville, TN, was readmitted to Fort Sanders Medical Center in June 2023 with sepsis after a double mastectomy.Â
She spent 5 days in the hospital after surgery to clear up the infection. Then she was offered a choice: She could either stay in the hospital while she received IV antibiotics, or she could go home and have the antibiotics given to her there under the Advanced Care at Home program of Covenant Health, the nine-hospital system to which Fort Sanders belongs.
She opted to go home, where she knew sheâd be more comfortable and would be close to her beloved dog. In the end, she was very glad she did.Â
âI received great care in the hospital, but to be allowed to be in the comfort of your own home, to be around my dog, who I think is therapeutic, to be able to cook my own meals, and to have the same one-on-one nursing care that I would have gotten in the hospital was great,â Stohler said. â
Being cared for at home helped her heal, she said. âI probably would have gotten a little stir crazy if Iâd stayed in the hospital any longer. I received excellent care at home.â
Covenantâs Advanced Care at Home program is an example of the hospital-at-home trend that has been growing rapidly since Medicare began reimbursing hospitals for this approach during the COVID pandemic. Currently, 322 hospitals in 37 states have Medicare waivers for these kinds of programs, although not all of them are currently functioning.
A recent survey published in The Journal of the American Medical Association found that nearly half of consumers would accept hospital-at-home, and more than a third were neutral on it. Only 17% said theyâd rather be cared for in a brick-and-mortar hospital.Â
The findings of the JAMA survey confirm those of earlier studies, said Bruce Leff, MD, a professor at Johns Hopkins Medical School in Baltimore, who has researched hospital-at-home since the 1990s. Like the new study, those trials found that the results had no relationship to individual traits, such as socioeconomic status, medical conditions, age, gender, or race.
Whether a person felt comfortable with the idea of hospital-at-home boiled down âto a preference for receiving care at home or in the hospital,â he said. Some people distrust hospitals, and others feel insecure about receiving care at home, even if it is provided by qualified health care professionals.
How Patients Are SelectedÂ
While the details of hospital-at-home vary from program to program, the basic scenario is that patients who need certain kinds of acute care can be sent home from hospitals, emergency departments, or clinics to receive that care at home. Among the kinds of conditions that make stable patients eligible are heart failure, COPD, pneumonia, cellulitis, and COVID-19, said John Busigin, MD, a hospitalist and medical director of Covenant Advanced Care at Home.Â
When a patient is admitted to hospital-at-home, the hospital will send along whatever equipment and medications that person needs. In some cases, this may include a hospital bed, although Stohler used her own. An IV line was put into her arm, and the IV stand was placed next to the bed.Â