10 Proven Strategies for Reducing Hospital Readmissions

Strategies to Reduce Hospital Readmissions

Quick Summary 

Reducing hospital readmissions means fewer patients return to the hospital within 30 days of going home. Home care teams are one of the best tools for making that happen. This article covers why readmissions happen, the federal program that holds hospitals accountable, 10 proven readmission reduction strategies to stop preventable return visits, and how caregiver training ties it all together. 

Introduction 

Getting better at home is not always easy — and without the right support, a lot of patients end up right back in the hospital within 30 days. Most of those return trips could have been prevented. A missed medication, an infection that was not caught in time, a warning sign that nobody noticed — small things can quickly turn into big problems. And when they do, it is the patient who suffers most. 

Home care teams are often the last line of defense between a patient and a preventable readmission. Caregivers spend more time with patients than almost anyone else. They are the ones who notice when something feels off, when a patient seems more confused than usual, or when their ankles are more swollen than they were yesterday. That kind of daily attention saves lives — but only when caregivers know what to look for and what to do about it. 

What is Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program? 

Definition: The Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program (HRRP) is a federal program created under the Affordable Care Act (ACA). It requires the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) to reduce payments to hospitals that have too many patients coming back within 30 days. 

CMS uses a “readmission ratio” to measure each hospital’s performance against the national average for specific health conditions. The program started by tracking three conditions: 

  • Acute myocardial infarction (AMI) — heart attack 
  • Heart failure (HF) 
  • Pneumonia (PN) 

In 2015, three more were added: 

  • Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) 
  • Elective total hip replacement (THA) 
  • Total knee replacement (TKA) 

Coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery was later added to the list as well. 

What Causes Preventable Hospital Readmissions 

Most preventable hospital readmissions happen because something breaks down after the patient goes home. 

Many factors put patients at higher risk of being readmitted. These include: 

  • Specific diagnoses — certain conditions carry more risk than others 
  • Multiple health problems at once — also called co-morbidities 
  • Mental health challenges — depression or anxiety can make recovery harder 
  • Older age — aging adults are more vulnerable after hospitalization 
  • Many medications — the more medications a patient takes, the higher the chance of a dangerous reaction 
  • Little or no caregiver support at home 
  • A history of past readmissions 
  • Financial stress or poor living conditions 
  • Infections picked up during or after the hospital stay 
  • Poor communication during discharge 

In many of these cases, a trained caregiver could catch the warning signs early. That early action is one of the simplest ways to stop hospital readmissions from happening. 

10 Proven Ways To Reduce Hospital Readmissions 

These 10 strategies are grounded in research and real-world practice. They work best when used together as part of a complete care plan — not as standalone fixes. 

Strategy 1: Medication Reconciliation 

When a patient goes home from the hospital, they often have a lot of medicines to take. Sometimes new medicines are added, old ones are stopped, or doses are changed. If nobody double-checks, mistakes can happen — and those mistakes can send the patient right back to the hospital. 

That’s why a pharmacist should review all of a patient’s medicines before they leave, to make sure everything is correct and safe. 

Tip: Ask the patient to bring every pill bottle to their first follow-up visit so the doctor can double-check everything one more time. 

Strategy 2: Identify High-Risk Patients Early 

Not all patients are equally likely to be readmitted. Identifying who is at highest risk before or right after discharge. Allow care teams to put more support in place from day one. 

High-risk factors include older age, multiple medications, a history of prior readmissions, weak home support, mental health challenges, and complex diagnoses. 

Care coordinators can use simple risk screening tools to flag these patients. When high-risk clients get more check-ins and closer monitoring in the first days home, problems are caught sooner. 

Action to take: Screen every new discharge patient for readmission risk and adjust the care plan based on what you find. 

Strategy 3: Use Medication Reconciliation 

Definition: Medication reconciliation is the process of comparing the medications a patient was taking before the hospital with the new medications prescribed at discharge. The goal is to catch errors, dangerous combinations, and confusion before they cause harm. 

Medication-related problems after discharge are a major cause of hospital readmissions.  

Research by Dr. Alan Foster found that 11% of discharged patients had an adverse drug event, and 27% of those events were considered preventable.

A separate study found that patients who received a medication review from a pharmacist by phone after discharge had significantly lower readmission rates at both 7 and 14 days compared to those who did not. 

At home, caregivers help by: 

  • Reminding patients when to take each medication 
  • Watching for side effects like dizziness, swelling, or nausea 
  • Alerting the care team when something seems off 

Action to take: Keep an updated medication list in every patient’s file and review it at each visit. 

Strategy 4: Prevent Healthcare-Associated Infections 

About 1 in every 20 hospitalized patients develops a healthcare-associated infection (HAI), according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

These infections are a leading reason patients return to the hospital after being discharged. 

The most common types of HAIs account for about 83% of all cases: 

  • Catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTI) 
  • Central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSI) 
  • Surgical site infections (SSI) 
  • Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) 

Common organisms behind many HAIs include MRSA, VRE, and C. difficile.  

Research from the University of Maryland found that patients who tested positive for these organisms more than 48 hours after admission had a significantly higher risk of being readmitted.

Action to take: Train all caregivers on infection control basics and wound observation protocols. 

Strategy 5: Use Technology to Improve Client Safety 

Every day, thousands of patients move through the hospital system. Keeping track of where each patient is, what they need, and what medications they are taking is a massive job. Technology helps make it manageable. 

Tools that support patient safety and reduce hospital readmissions include: 

  • Computer Provider Order Entry (CPOE) — reduces prescription errors 
  • Bar Code Medication Administration — verifies the right medication goes to the right patient 
  • Decision Support Systems — alert care teams to potential problems 
  • Robotic pharmacies — improve accuracy in medication dispensing 
  • Remote monitoring devices — track vital signs like weight, heart rate, and oxygen at home 
  • Medication reminder apps — help patients stay on their schedule 

Action to take: Explore remote monitoring options for high-risk clients, especially those with heart failure, COPD, or diabetes. 

Strategy 6: Improve Handoff Communication 

According to The Joint Commission, about 80% of serious medical errors involve miscommunication between care providers during patient transfers or handoffs.

Poor handoffs lead to missed medications, delayed treatments, wrong care plans, longer hospital stays, and avoidable readmissions. When a patient moves from the hospital to a home care agency, the quality of that handoff can make or break their recovery. 

The Joint Commission recommends that handoff communication should: 

  • Be a two-way conversation — not just one person talking 
  • Allow time for the receiving team to ask questions 
  • Be free from interruptions when possible 
  • Include the patient’s current condition, care plan, recent changes, and potential problems ahead 
  • Use the teach-back method, where the receiver repeats the key information back to confirm understanding 

Action to take: Create a standard handoff checklist that your agency uses every time a new patient arrives from the hospital. 

Strategy 7: Schedule Early Follow-Up Care 

A home visit within 24 to 48 hours of discharge is one of the most effective ways to prevent hospital readmissions.

That first visit is critical. Caregivers can review the discharge plan, check medications, spot any warning signs, and make sure the home environment is safe. Follow-up phone calls in the first week add another layer of support. 

Primary care appointments in the first 7 days after discharge also matter a great deal. Home care agencies can help patients schedule these visits and arrange transportation when needed. 

Action to take: Make a 24-hour post-discharge home visit a standard step in your agency’s intake process. 

Strategy 8: Educate Clients and Family Caregivers 

Education is one of the most powerful tools to reduce hospital readmissions. When patients and their families understand their condition, know the warning signs, and their medications, they are far more likely to act early when something changes. 

Education should be clear and simple — no medical jargon. It should cover: 

  • How to manage the patient’s specific condition 
  • What symptoms mean it is time to call the doctor 
  • Medication schedules and what side effects to watch for 
  • Diet, hydration, and activity guidelines 
  • Who to contact and when 

Family caregivers need this information just as much as the patient. They are often the ones making the call to seek help. 

Warning Sign What It May Mean What To Do
Sudden weight gain (2–3 lbs in a day or 5 lbs in a week) Heart failure / fluid buildup Call nurse or doctor right away
Shortness of breath Heart or lung problem Call 911 if severe; notify nurse
Confusion or sudden change in behavior Infection, stroke, or medication issue Report to nurse immediately
Fever (above 100.4°F / 38°C) Infection Notify nurse or doctor same day
Wound redness, swelling, or discharge Infection at wound site Contact nurse or wound care team
Medication side effects (dizziness, rash, nausea) Adverse drug reaction Do not stop meds; call provider first

Strategy 9: Strengthen Home Support Systems 

A safe home environment is the foundation of a good recovery. Patients who go home to unsafe or unsupported conditions are at much higher risk of being readmitted. 

Strong home support includes: 

  • Checking for fall hazards — loose rugs, poor lighting, cluttered walkways 
  • Helping with daily activities like bathing, dressing, and meal preparation 
  • Monitoring nutrition and hydration 
  • Watching for signs of isolation or depression 
  • Making sure the patient has what they need to follow their care plan 

Home care agencies provide this kind of support every day. When patients feel cared for and safe at home, they recover better and stay out of the hospital. 

Action to take: Conduct a home safety walk-through at every first post-discharge visit. 

Strategy 10: Use a Transition-of-Care Model 

Definition: A transition-of-care model is a structured program that guides patients through the move from hospital to home, or from one care setting to another. These models package individual strategies into one organized, coordinated plan. 

The best transition-of-care programs include: 

  • Multidisciplinary teamwork between doctors, nurses, social workers, and home care 
  • Patient and family education 
  • Clear communication at every step 
  • Follow-up calls or home visits after discharge 
  • Coordination with primary care providers 

Well-known transition-of-care models include: 

  • BOOST — Better Outcomes for Older Adults through Safe Transitions 
  • GRACE — Geriatric Resources for Assessment and Care of Elders (Jabbarpour, Y. M., & Raney, L. (2017)) 
  • TCM — Transitional Care Model 
  • Project RED — Re-Engineered Discharge 
  • Bridge Model 
  • Guided Care 
  • STAAR — State Action on Avoidable Re-Hospitalizations 

Each of these models brings the individual strategies above into one complete, global approach. Because reducing hospital readmissions works best when every piece of the plan fits together. 

Action to take: Talk to your local hospital partners about joining a formal transition-of-care program. 

The Role of Caregiver Training in Preventing Readmissions 

Understanding how to reduce hospital readmissions starts with watching patients daily, spotting warning signs early, and keeping the whole care team informed. 

Caregivers spend more time with patients than almost anyone else on the care team. That gives them a unique ability to notice when something is changing. But that kind of observation only works when caregivers know what to look for. 

Good caregiver training teaches home health workers how to: 

  • Monitor breathing, weight, swelling, and mental clarity 
  • Recognize red flags like sudden confusion, shortness of breath, or changes in walking 
  • Support medication schedules and report missed doses 
  • Document changes clearly so the nurse or care coordinator can respond fast 
  • Follow consistent care steps tied to the patient’s discharge plan 

Platforms like Learn2Care make it easier to deliver high-quality, consistent training across a whole team. When every caregiver is working from the same knowledge base, care is more reliable, and preventable readmissions go down. 

How Home Care Agencies Can Build Effective Readmission Prevention Programs 

Home care agencies are in a powerful position. They are the bridge between the hospital and the patient’s home. Building a strong readmission prevention program does not have to be complicated. Here is how to start:

Step 1 — Train caregivers on post-discharge care, medication support, infection prevention, and symptom monitoring.

Step 2 — Create standard care protocols so every caregiver follows the same steps for every new discharge patient.

Step 3 — Screen for risk using simple tools to identify which patients need the most support after discharge.

Step 4 — Track outcomes by recording readmission rates, noting patterns, and reviewing what happened when a patient went back.

Step 5 — Use technology to support communication, documentation, and remote monitoring.

Step 6 — Partner with hospitals and discharge planners to join formal transition-of-care programs and become a trusted part of the care team.

Agencies that follow these steps do not just reduce readmissions. They become the kind of partners that hospitals want to work with — and that means more referrals and better outcomes for everyone.

Closing 

Reducing hospital readmissions takes a team. It takes hospitals, home care agencies, caregivers, families, and patients all working together toward the same goal: keeping people safe and healthy at home. 

Each of the 10 strategies in this guide fixes a specific gap in the care process. But they work best when used together — as part of one complete plan that puts the patient first. That is exactly what transition-of-care models are built to do. 

Home care agencies that spend time training, communication, and working with others are already making a difference. Every day, they show that readmissions that can be prevented really can be prevented. 

Key Takeaways

  • Focus help on the first 30 days after a patient leaves the hospital 
  • Know which health conditions tracked by CMS carry the highest risk 
  • Check every new patient and make a plan to watch them closely 
  • Review medicines when a patient leaves the hospital and help them take the right ones at home 
  • Teach caregivers how to stop the spread of germs and how to check wounds 
  • Use a standard handoff checklist every single time 
  • Visit within 24–48 hours of every hospital discharge 
  • Give easy-to-read guides about warning signs at the first visit 
  • Use remote monitoring tools for patients who are at high risk 
  • Work with hospitals on official programs like BOOST or TCM

FAQs for Aspiring Caregivers

What is the Medicare 30-day readmission Rule?

The Medicare 30-day readmission rule means that if a patient goes back to the hospital within 30 days of leaving, the hospital can get fined by the government. This started in 2012 to push hospitals to take better care of patients before sending them home, so they don’t end up coming back so soon.

The most common conditions linked to hospital readmissions are heart failure, pneumonia, heart attacks, COPD (a lung disease), infections, and diabetes. Most of the time, people end up going back because they forgot to take their medicine, missed a doctor’s appointment, or got sick again before they were fully healed.

Prevent hospital readmissions by visiting patients within 24 to 48 hours of discharge, managing medications carefully, and keeping clear communication between the hospital and home care team.

Trained caregivers know what to look for, how to document changes, and when to alert the care team. Platforms like Learn2Care make it easier for agencies to deliver consistent, high-quality training to every caregiver — so the whole team is working from the same playbook and patients get safer, more reliable care at home.

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