Ruth Ratajczak knew that the elderly man was in trouble.
Only a few days before, he had been hospitalized with internal bleeding. Now back home, he told her he was taking Coumadin, a blood thinner. In his condition, she knew, that could be disastrous.
"I said, 'You know what, let's call your doctor.'" The doctor promptly took him off the drug. And spared him a return trip to the hospital.
For Ratajczak, that was a success story -- even if it meant less money for her employer. As a so-called transition coach at St. John's Hospital in Maplewood, it's her job to keep patients from coming back too soon.
Until now, hospitals have had little incentive to keep patients away. But last week, the federal Medicare program started imposing financial penalties on hospitals that, in its view, have too many repeat customers.
The change, part of the 2010 federal health reform law, was prompted by research showing that 20 percent of Medicare patients who leave the hospital are readmitted within 30 days -- often because of medication errors or other missteps.
And that has shifted attention onto what hospitals can do differently to help patients after they go home.
"What used to happen is we would call patients when they left the hospital," said Karen Tomes, director of Care Management at Allina hospitals. Basically, it was little more than a courtesy call to make sure they understood their medications. "The patient would say yes, and we'd move on."