# Who Makes it Home: SNF to Community Transitions for Traditional Medicare Beneficiaries with Serious Mental Illness

**Authors:** Taylor Bucy, Carrie Henning-Smith, Donovan Maust, Tetyana Shippee, Dori Cross

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.014 · Innovation in Aging · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study examines factors influencing discharge outcomes for people with serious mental illness after a skilled nursing facility stay.

## Contribution

The paper identifies predictors of successful community discharge for Medicare beneficiaries with SMI.

## Key findings

- 54% of SNF stays for people with SMI ended in community discharge.
- Community discharge was associated with younger age, female gender, and lower rates of dual eligibility and ADRD.
- Smaller, urban SNFs with higher integration and quality were more likely to discharge patients to the community.

## Abstract

Discharge to the community following a skilled nursing facility (SNF) stay is a key metric of high-quality care. This aligns with preferences around aging-in-place, yet significant fragmentation across service providers has made achieving this outcome challenging. This is especially true for people with serious mental illness (SMI) (i.e. schizophrenia, bipolar disorder) who represent a growing proportion of U.S. long-term care residents. We use a 4-year (2016-2019), 100% sample of traditional Medicare data to examine individual- and organization-level predictors of SNF discharge location (community vs other) for persons with SMI. Of the 118,325 unique SNF stays for people with SMI, 54% ended in discharge to the community. Patients with SMI who were discharged to the community (vs not) were significantly younger (69 vs 72 y/o), more likely to be female (61% vs 56%), and were less likely to be dual-eligible (51% vs 71%) or to have co-occurring ADRD (33% vs 51%). SMI patients discharged to the community were also significantly more likely to receive care in smaller, urban SNFs, that were more integrated, higher quality, and saw a smaller share of SMI patients overall. These findings were reinforced by our fully adjusted regression models. While many socioenvironmental factors restrict patients’ ability to return home following a SNF stay, better positioning SNFs to achieve good outcomes requires significant investments along the continuum. Policymakers should consider how to leverage value-based payment programs in a way that better accounts for the resources required to coordinate care for this population, including partnership with community-based providers.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** schizophrenia (MONDO:0005090), bipolar disorder (MONDO:0004985)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12760079