Health Affairs September 5, 2019
Paula Chatterjee, Allison K. Hoffman, Rachel M. Werner

In 2015, Medicare spent nearly $60 billion on institutional postacute care, an amount that has rapidly increased in recent years. In fact, nearly three-quarters of the geographic variation in total Medicare spending is driven by the variation in postacute care spending alone. Taken together, these patterns call into question the value of postacute care and especially its return on investment for patients.

Given its growing contribution to US health care costs, postacute care has become a common target for efforts to reduce costs under alternative payment models, such as bundled payments and accountable care organizations (ACOs). These models are increasingly holding hospitals responsible for the costs of care provided during the post-hospitalization period. Recent evaluations have found that cost...

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Topics: CMS, Govt Agencies, Health System / Hospital, Insurance, Medicare, Patient / Consumer, Payment Models, Post-Acute Care, Provider
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