Referrals of hospitalized patients with opioid use disorder (OUD) to postacute medical care facilities are commonly rejected. We linked all electronic referrals from a Boston safety-net hospital in 2018 to… Click to show full abstract
Referrals of hospitalized patients with opioid use disorder (OUD) to postacute medical care facilities are commonly rejected. We linked all electronic referrals from a Boston safety-net hospital in 2018 to clinical data and used multivariable logistic regression to examine the association between OUD diagnosis and rejection from postacute medical care. Hospitalized patients with OUD were referred to more facilities than patients without OUD (8.2 versus 6.6 per hospitalization), were rejected a greater proportion of the time (83.3 percent versus 65.5 percent), and in adjusted analyses had greater odds of rejection from postacute care (adjusted odds ratio, 2.2). In addition, people with OUD were referred disproportionately to a small subset of facilities with a higher likelihood of acceptance. Our findings document disparities in postacute care admissions for people with OUD. Efforts to ensure equitable access to medically necessary postacute medical care for people with OUD are needed.
               
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