Transition networks in a cohort of patients with congestive heart failure: A novel application of informatics methods to inform care coordination Journal Article


Authors: Merrill, J. A.; Sheehan, B. M.; Carley, K. M.; Stetson, P. D.
Article Title: Transition networks in a cohort of patients with congestive heart failure: A novel application of informatics methods to inform care coordination
Abstract: Background: Unnecessary hospital readmissions are one source of escalating costs that may be reduced through improved care coordination, but how best to design and evaluate coordination programs is poorly understood. Measuring patient flow between service visits could support decisions for coordinating care, particularly for conditions such as congestive heart failure (CHF) which have high morbidity, costs, and hospital readmission rates. Objective: To determine the feasibility of using network analysis to explore patterns of service delivery for patients with CHF in the context of readmissions. Methods: A retrospective cohort study used de-identified records for patients ≥18 years with an ICD-9 diagnosis code 428.0-428.9, and service visits between July 2011 and June 2012. Patients were stratified by admission outcome. Traditional and novel network analysis techniques were applied to characterize care patterns. Results: Patients transitioned between services in different order and frequency depending on admission status. Patient-to-service CoUsage networks were diffuse suggesting unstructured flow of patients with no obvious coordination hubs. In service-to-service Transition networks a specialty heart failure service was on the care path to the most other services for never admitted patients, evidence of how specialist care may prevent hospital admissions for some patients. For patients admitted once, transitions expanded for a clinic-based internal medicine service which clinical experts identified as a Patient Centered Medical Home implemented in the first month for which we obtained data. Conclusions: We detected valid patterns consistent with a targeted care initiative, which experts could understand and explain, suggesting the method has utility for understanding coordination. The analysis revealed strong but complex patterns that could not be demonstrated using traditional linear methods alone. Network analysis supports measurement of real world health care service delivery, shows how transitions vary between services based on outcome, and with further development has potential to inform coordination strategies. © Schattauer 2015.
Keywords: heart failure; care coordination; healthcare systems; patient care management; network analysis
Journal Title: Applied Clinical Informatics
Volume: 6
Issue: 3
ISSN: 1869-0327
Publisher: Schattauer Gmbh  
Date Published: 2015-01-01
Start Page: 548
End Page: 564
Language: English
DOI: 10.4338/aci-2015-02-ra-0021
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC4586342
PUBMED: 26504499
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 1 September 2016 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Peter D Stetson
    45 Stetson