Information sharing to support care transitions for patients with complex mental health and social needs

Author:

Bucy Taylor I.1ORCID,Cross Dori A.1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Health Policy & Management University of Minnesota School of Public Health Minneapolis Minnesota USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPatients with complex behavioral and mental health conditions require significant transitional care coordination. It is unclear how skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) that serve these patients engage in care transfer with hospitals, specifically whether they experience discrepancies in the type of information shared by hospital partners and/or use different approaches to secure needed information.MethodsCross‐sectional analysis of a national 2019–2020 SNF survey that collected information on transitional care practices with referring hospitals; respondents were directors of nursing services. We used chi‐squared tests and descriptive statistics to characterize hospital information sharing practices experienced by facilities that accept complex patients (e.g., serious mental illness, substance use disorder, and/or medication assisted treatment), and to compare them to facilities that treat a less complex population.ResultsA total of 215 SNFs had sufficiently complete responses for inclusion in the analysis. Of these respondents, 57% accepted two or more types of patients with complex conditions of interest; these SNFs were more likely to be urban, for‐profit, and serve more dual‐eligible patients. SNFs accepting complex patients experience information sharing on par with other facilities, and are more likely to receive information on behavioral, social, mental, and functional status (25.41% vs. 12.90%; p = 0.023). These facilities are also more likely to consistently use electronic methods (e.g., an online portal, shared electronic health record [EHR] access) to retrieve information from partner hospitals.ConclusionsSNFs accepting complex patients demonstrate some evidence of enhanced information retrieval via electronically mediated pathways. Overall, information sharing remains underdeveloped in this care context. Policymakers should continue to prioritize widespread digital infrastructure that supports post‐acute care delivery.

Funder

John A. Hartford Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology

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