Centers for Medicare and Medicaid's Qin‐Qio Targeted Response Intervention Associated with Reductions in COVID‐19 Incidence in Nursing Homes

Research Objective In 2020 COVID‐19 became the leading cause of death in the United States,[1] with nursing home (NH) residents accounting for approximately 40% of all COVID‐19 deaths.[2] To help NHs combat COVID‐19, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) directed targeted response (TR...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health services research 2021-09, Vol.56 (S2), p.52-52
Hauptverfasser: Sonnenfeld, Nancy, Li, Jiaqi, Lichtenfeld, Jake, Shang, Kevin, Herzer, Kurt, Flemming, Robert, Yu, Ping, Monteiro, Anita, McGann, Paul, Fleisher, Lee
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Research Objective In 2020 COVID‐19 became the leading cause of death in the United States,[1] with nursing home (NH) residents accounting for approximately 40% of all COVID‐19 deaths.[2] To help NHs combat COVID‐19, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) directed targeted response (TR) interventions through its twelve Quality Improvement Network – Quality Improvement Organization (QIN‐QIOs) contractors. TR involves focused onsite and/or virtual one‐on‐one technical assistance to nursing homes. For COVID‐19 TR, the most common QIN‐QIO‐reported activities include: assistance with developing and implementing policies and improved processes for hand hygiene, ensuring availability and proper use of personal protective equipment, and general infection control. CMS’ criteria to refer NHs for QIN‐QIO assistance varied over the entire study period as the program evolved. At various times, these criteria included: infection control‐related health inspection deficiencies, NHs located in counties designated as geographic hot spots, having 30 or more new COVID‐19 cases in the past week. NH participation in TR is voluntary and free‐of‐charge. The objective of this study was to assess TR impact on COVID‐19 incidence in NHs. Study Design We used a quasi‐experimental observational design. NHs may have started receiving TR any time between April 24, and October 28, 2020. COVID‐19 incidence data were obtained for May 31 through November 29, 2020 from the National Healthcare Safety Network. Each program NH was matched at the time of first QIN‐QIO interaction with a similar non‐TR NH. Matching characteristics were: overall NH star rating, health inspections star rating, bed size, state, area deprivation index, and county‐level COVID incidence in the month of and the month prior to first receipt of TR. We used longitudinal regression models in the period following first QIN‐QIO interaction to compare COVID‐19 incidence between NHs that received TR to matched controls that did not. Generalized estimating equations with a Poisson distribution and log‐link were used to model COVID‐19 incidence, TR status and a full set of covariates. Population Studied CMS‐certified NHs providing short‐stay, long‐stay, or both types of care. Principal Findings Among the 2474 NHs that received TR in the study period, 2013 were matched to 2013 similar NHs that did not. Depending on the month, COVID‐19 incidence after matching was similar or higher in the TR group at baseline, but all
ISSN:0017-9124
1475-6773
DOI:10.1111/1475-6773.13820