Blog
By Mary D. Naylor, PhD, RN, FAAN
Marian S. Ware Professor in Gerontology
Director, NewCourtland Center for Transitions and Health
University of Pennsylvania, School of Nursing
President Obama and Congress have both called for dramatic changes to how we deliver care in this country. With the aim of reducing costs, improving quality, and expanding coverage, legislators are calling for rapid innovation and real solutions. While many approaches are being considered, there is one approach on which many stakeholders have coalesced – the promise of transitional care for the chronically ill, elderly population. In fact, transitional care should be a cornerstone to American health care and a central component to these reform discussions.
Transitional care includes a broad range of time limited services designed to ensure health care continuity, avoid preventable poor outcomes among at risk populations, and promote the safe and timely transfer of patients from one level of care to another or from one setting to another. Transitional care is founded on effective communication and information transfer between the patient, family caregivers, and all health care providers involved in their care, dedicated post-discharge follow-up, and consistent and ongoing care throughout acute episodes of care from a single provider with specialized preparation in the care of people with multiple, chronic conditions who face the greatest risk for avoidable hospital admissions and poor outcomes.
Transitional care makes sense on its face, and the evidence backs this up. Nearly two decades of NIH supported research conducted by a multidisciplinary team at the University of Pennsylvania demonstrates that the Transitional Care Model (TCM) achieves the very aims that the Administration seeks to resolve—reduced costs, improved health care outcomes, and enhanced satisfaction of consumers, families, and providers. In fact, in the most recent National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR)-funded randomized controlled clinical trial reported to date, the TCM demonstrated savings of nearly $5,000 in total care costs per patient to Medicare and significant reductions in readmission rates up to one year after hospital discharge compared to routine follow-up care.
At the heart of TCM is a transitional care nurse (TCN), a master's prepared nurse with advanced knowledge and skills in the care of the chronically ill, older adults and their family caregivers, who provides regular hospital and home visits, 7 day per week telephone availability, and serves as the primary coordinator of care as patients transition from the hospital to home. The focus of TCM is to interrupt the cycle of repeated hospitalizations common among this population and achieve longer term positive outcomes
Why should TCM matter to the nation?
1. Today’s population is both older and more chronically ill than at any other point in our nation’s history, a trend projected to continue. This will place significant demands on our health care delivery and financing system that can be addressed, at least in part, by transitional care.
2. Family caregivers, spouses, children and friends who are the primary providers of services to these elders, also face tremendous challenges (e.g., lack of knowledge and skills, burden and stress)—challenges that can be mitigated by the TCM.
3. Chronically ill, elderly patients face high rates of rehospitalization—a "churning" which costs the American taxpayer $15 billion annually in Medicare spending and businesses $34 billion in losses each year due to employees' need to care for loved ones. TCM is a proven approach to care that addresses these important financial and societal problems.
For more information about TCM visit http://www.transitionalcare.info/.
Editor's note: Mary Naylor’s Transitional Care Model was featured on NPR’s Morning Edition for Tuesday, July 28, 2009.
By Gail Tiwanak
Director Hawaii State Center for Nursing
Here in Hawai’i, as in states across the U.S., we are in need of more primary health care professionals, particularly in rural areas. This is why we are so pleased that, on July 2, 2009, Hawai'i Governor Linda Lingle signed into law Act 169, which will provide Hawai’i with greater access to health care professionals, specifically Advanced Practice Registered Nurses (APRNs). This legislation was introduced in the State Senate by Senator Rosalyn Baker of Maui and in the State House of Representatives by Representative Marilyn B. Lee (a Registered Nurse on Oahu).
When developing the legislation, the Hawai’i legislature looked to the evidence. According to published studies, appropriately trained APRNs can provide high quality health care and achieve positive outcomes for patients. Moreover, APRNs are capable of providing primary health care and play an important role in meeting the growing demand for primary health care, particularly in underserved areas.
Act 169 recognizes APRNs as participating primary health care providers for insurance coverage purposes; permits APRNs to sign documents relating to health care for their patients; clarifies educational and other requirements for APRNs; and updates the authority for APRNs to write prescriptions, including controlled substances medical equipment, and therapeutic regimens, in accordance with their scope of practice.
The most important outcome of the legislation is the increased access to primary care it provides to the citizens of Hawai’I, especially those in rural areas. Previously, APRNs practicing in Hawai’i were limited by regulation in the kinds of services they could provide and for which they could receive reimbursement. This law will increase the numbers of APRNs now able to provide primary care to areas of need on all the islands of Hawai'i, with the most acute need being in the counties of Hawai'i, Maui and Kauai. Although there is a network of community health centers and critical access hospitals throughout the state, the previous limits to APRN practice and a chronic shortage of new physicians created a lack of access to care for citizens. Interests of patients will be well served because APRNs are now an essential component of the primary health care team.
We are confident that the Hawai'i State Center for Nursing has strengthened nursing’s position and role in the delivery of health care and this important development could not have been accomplished without the strong support of our champions, Senator Rosalyn Baker and Representative Marilyn Lee, and a united nursing community.
Hawaii is one of 30 states with multi-stakeholder teams working with the Center to Champion Nursing in America to increase educational capacity. Learn more about our state efforts.


