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Evaluation of an Intensive Care Coordination Program to Reduce Use of Hospital Emergency Department Services by Wisconsin Medicaid Members
The State of Wisconsin is now expanding its investment in care coordination models as an effort to reduce inappropriate hospital emergency department (ED) use, improve health outcomes, and reduce Medicaid expenditures. This effort begins with a pilot program to support emergency department care coordination in hospitals and health systems that apply and are selected to participate in the pilot program. The Wisconsin Medicaid program seeks to understand whether this program achieves its intended goals and, specifically, whether the Medicaid payment for such care coordination services produces the intended program outcomes. Hospitals will select members that will receive care coordination services. In a quasi-experimental approach, the study team will compare members that do vs. do not receive the services will be used examine the effects of care coordination and referrals on total ED visits, primary-care treatable ED visits, non-emergent ED visits, and health care costs, as well as the specific effects of referring patients to providers who offer low-cost and after-hours care. To assess the importance of targeting, study team will conduct stratified analyses of vulnerable groups such as people with disabilities and individuals with specific clinical needs.
Age
18 - 64 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
ThedaCare
Appleton, Wisconsin, United States
Ascension Wisconsin
Glendale, Wisconsin, United States
Aurora Health Care
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States
Froedtert Health , Wisconsin
Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, United States
Start Date
March 1, 2022
Primary Completion Date
December 15, 2024
Completion Date
December 15, 2024
Last Updated
January 10, 2025
3,405
ACTUAL participants
Intensive Care Coordination
OTHER
Lead Sponsor
University of Wisconsin, Madison
NCT07405996
NCT06703931
Data Source & Attribution
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