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Benchmarking Seattle Medical Post Acute Care in Seattle, WA against all nursing homes

 

Seattle Medical Post Acute Care in Seattle, WA has the 12th-fewest short-stay residents who had an outpatient emergency department visit (5.5%) among the 111 nursing homes in Washington that are owned by a for-profit corporation. That 5.5% compares to an average of 11.8% across those 111 nursing homes.

Seattle Medical Post Acute Care has these related standings among those 111 nursing homes:

  • short-stay residents who had an outpatient emergency department visit = 5.5% (12th-fewest)

  • short-stay residents who were rehospitalized after a nursing home admission = 21.7% (15th-most, tied)

  • short-stay residents who were rehospitalized or had an outpatient emergency department visit = 27.2% (31st-fewest, tied)

  • hospitalizations per 1,000 long-stay resident days = 1.29 (37th-most)

  • outpatient emergency department visits per 1,000 long-stay resident days = 0.50 (22nd-fewest, tied)

  • incentive bonus payments per $1M in claims = $30,593 (41st-highest)

Visualize

 
 

Peers

beat out by Rainier Rehabilitation in Puyallup, WA (0.0%), Lake Ridge Center in Moses Lake, WA (2.3%), Renton Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Renton, WA (2.7%), and North Central Care Center in Spokane, WA (2.9%), and 7 others, ending with Snohomish Health and Rehabilitation in Snohomish, WA (5.1%).

Incidentally, none of the 12 is a continuing-care retirement community. All 12 have a Resident Council. None of the 12 is a special-focus facility or candidate. All 12 are Medicaid certified.


beat Life Care Center of Mount Vernon in Mount Vernon, WA (5.7%), Tacoma Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Tacoma, WA (6.4%), Life Care Center of Skagit Valley in Sedro Woolley, WA (6.9%), and Grays Harbor Health & Rehabilitation Center in Aberdeen, WA (7.0%), and others, ending with Prestige Care & Rehabilitation - Clarkston in Clarkston, WA (29.0%).

20 out of the other 110 nursing homes were ruled out due to missing, unknown, or not-applicable values for short-stay residents who had an outpatient emergency department visit, e.g., Life Care Center of Kirkland in Kirkland, WA.

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References

  1. ownership. Nursing homes can be run by private for-profit corporations, non-profit corporations, religious-affiliated organizations, or government entities. Refer to Glossary. Except where noted, all data come from the Nov 6, 2020 update at Nursing Home Compare and all changes-over-time are over two years, comparing to the Nov 1, 2018 update.
  2. short-stay residents who had an outpatient emergency department visit. Lower values are better. The percent of short-stay residents who entered or reentered the facility from a hospital, visited an emergency department within 30 days of the start of the stay, and this visit did not result in an inpatient or observation stay. The value is the risk-adjusted value for the quality measure. Refer to Nursing Home Compare Claims-Based Quality Measure Technical Specifications. To qualify for short-stay residents who had an outpatient emergency department visit, the number of residents in certified beds must be at least 40. Except where noted, all data come from the Nov 6, 2020 update at Nursing Home Compare and all changes-over-time are over two years, comparing to the Nov 1, 2018 update.
  3. in state. Except where noted, all data come from the Nov 6, 2020 update at Nursing Home Compare and all changes-over-time are over two years, comparing to the Nov 1, 2018 update.