Volume 55 | Number 4 | August 2020

Abstract List

Ohbet Cheon PhD, MPA, Juha Baek MPA, Bita A. Kash PhD, MBA, FACHE, Stephen L. Jones MD, MSHI


Objective

To compare hospital‐community partnerships among safety‐net hospitals relative to non–safety‐net hospitals, and explore whether hospital‐community partnerships are associated with reductions in readmission rates.


Data Sources

Data from four nationwide hospital‐level datasets for 2015‐2016, including American Hospital Association (AHA) annual survey, Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment System (IPPS) data, CMS Hospital Compare, and County Health Rankings National (CHRN) data.


Study Design

We first examined how safety‐net hospitals partner with nine different community providers, and how the overall and individual partnership patterns differ from those in non–safety‐net hospitals. We then explored their association with 30‐day readmission rates by diagnosis and hospital wide.


Data Collection/Extraction Methods

We included 1979 hospitals across 50 US states.


Principal Findings

Safety‐net hospitals were more engaged in hospital‐community partnerships, especially with local public health, local governments, social services, nonprofits, and insurance companies, relative to their non–safety‐net peers. However, we found that such partnerships were not significantly related to reductions in readmission rates. The findings indicated that merely partnering with various community organizations may not be associated with readmission rate reduction.


Conclusions

Before promoting partnerships with various community organizations for its own sake, further prospective, longitudinal, and evidence‐based guidance derived from the study of hospital‐community partnerships is needed to make meaningful recommendations aimed at readmission rate reduction in safety‐net hospitals.