Hospital at home cuts ED visits, mortality, new study finds

ILLINOIS, UNITED STATES — Hospital-at-home programs deliver better clinical outcomes than traditional inpatient care — including lower in-hospital mortality and fewer emergency department visits within 30 days of discharge, according to a new study published in JAMA Network Open.
The research, based on Medicare beneficiary data from 68 hospitals in 2021 and 2022, lands as lawmakers extended CMS’s Acute Hospital Care At Home program through September 2030, giving health systems rare long-term policy stability to invest in the model.
For hospital executives watching capacity, costs and patient outcomes all move in the wrong direction, the findings deliver a clear operational signal.
A care model that works — when hospitals can run it
Patients in hospital-at-home programs were less likely to be escalated to intensive care and less likely to develop hospital-related complications like infections, according to the study.
The model also produced “minor decreases” in total healthcare costs, though care duration ran longer than traditional inpatient stays.
The research linked hospital-at-home programs to “decreased emergency department use within 30 days of discharge and lower in-hospital mortality,” giving hospital leaders concrete data to support program expansion.
For health systems facing chronic overcrowding, the operational benefit is just as compelling as the clinical one. Every patient managed at home frees a bed for higher-acuity cases, reducing ED boarding and improving throughput across the entire facility.
With long-term CMS reimbursement now secured, the financial case for building out hospital-at-home programs has never been stronger.
Why adoption is lagging — and where hospitals can step up
Adoption is highly concentrated. Of the 68 hospitals studied, just 11 accounted for roughly half of all hospital-at-home admissions — and all 11 were in urban areas. Admissions skewed heavily toward the Northeast and South, with only one high-utilizer hospital in the Midwest and none in the West.
Researchers wrote the findings “underscore the need to address practical and implementation challenges to broaden equitable access,” flagging high-speed internet gaps, long travel distances and staffing constraints as the main barriers in rural markets.
That implementation gap is where outsourcing partners are gaining ground with United States health systems. Specialized vendors are taking on remote patient monitoring support, virtual care coordination, medical records management, billing and back-office workflows that make hospital-at-home programs operationally viable.
With CMS funding locked in through 2030 and clinical evidence stacking up, hospitals that pair the model with the right operational support are the ones positioned to scale — without overloading clinical staff already running thin.

Independent




