“Super-utilizers” – people who visit hospital emergency rooms often and are admitted to hospital beds with unusual frequency – are costing the health care system millions of dollars a year.
According to a new report from the Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council (PHC4), super-utilizers – people admitted to the hospital at least five times in a year – while just three percent of hospital patients in FY 2014, accounted for 17 percent of the state’s Medicaid expenditures for inpatient care ($216 million) and 14 percent of Medicare inpatient expenditures ($545 million).  In all, 18 percent of Medicaid hospital admissions in Pennsylvania in FY 2014 were for super-utilizers.
 PHC4 identified the three leading reasons for these admissions as heart failure, septicemia, and mental health disorders.
PHC4 identified the three leading reasons for these admissions as heart failure, septicemia, and mental health disorders.
Learn more about super-utilizers and their impact on hospital admissions and health care spending in the PHC4 report, which can be found here.
