# Home Health Initiation by Payor Type and Associated Outcomes among Medicare-Enrolled Veterans

**Authors:** Roman Ayele, Frank DeVone, Kate Magid, Andrew Zullo, Ellen McCreedy, Pedro Gozalo, Stefan Gravenstein

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.3788 · Innovation in Aging · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study examines how different payor types affect the timing and outcomes of home health care for Medicare-enrolled Veterans.

## Contribution

The study is the first to explore how payor type influences the timeliness and outcomes of home health initiation among Veterans.

## Key findings

- VA-paid HH had lower rehospitalization but higher short-term mortality compared to Traditional Medicare.
- VA-paid HH initiated faster than Medicare-paid HH, especially for Medicare Advantage patients.
- Outcomes varied by payor, with implications for access and quality of care.

## Abstract

Medicare-enrolled Veterans may receive Veterans Health Administration (VA), Traditional Medicare (TM), or Medicare Advantage (MA) funded home health care (HH). Payor type influences rehospitalization and mortality, but does days to HH initiation by payor relate to rehospitalization, nursing home (NH) admission, and death?

Our retrospective cohort study evaluated 72,743 Medicare-enrolled Veterans discharged from VA medical centers (2017–2019) who initiated HH within 14 days for 30- and 90-day rehospitalization, death, and NH admission. We also evaluated timeliness of HH initiation (within vs. >2 days after discharge), relative risks by payor, and for Veterans at lower baseline mortality risk.

Among Veterans starting HH within 2 days (n = 35,988), 34.8% received VA-paid HH, 56.3% TM, and 8.8% MA. Rehospitalization within 30 days was 18.5% for VA, 19.5% TM, and 19.7% MA; 90-day rates were 33.3%, 33.8%, and 33.5%, respectively. Thirty-day mortality was higher for VA-paid HH (3.3%) vs TM (2.9%) and MA (3.0%), and at 90 days (9.6% vs. 8.3% and 8.9%). NH admission at 30 days was similar. For HH initiation timeliness, VA-paid HH more often began ≤2 days (RRadj=0.95, 95% CI 0.93–0.98 for all Medicare; 0.95, 95% CI 0.92–0.99 for TM; 0.87, 95% CI 0.83–0.91 for MA).

Preliminarily, outcomes differ by payor type: VA-paid HH had lower rehospitalization but higher short-term mortality than TM, and faster initiation than Medicare-paid HH. These findings have policy relevance of payor-driven differences in access, quality, and outcomes. This novel study has implications for quality and access monitoring across payors.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12763753