Maryland is entering a significant transition in how hospitals are reimbursed as the state moves into a new federal payment framework known as Achieving Healthcare Efficiency through Accountable Design (AHEAD). For decades, Maryland operated under a unique rate-setting system that allowed the state to determine hospital reimbursement levels. As this model sunsets and the federal government gradually assumes greater control over Medicare hospital payments by 2028, hospitals will face increased financial pressure and heightened accountability for outcomes.
Under the AHEAD model, Medicare reimbursement for hospitals will gradually align more closely with national standards. As a result, hospitals are expected to operate with tighter margins and increased scrutiny around utilization and quality metrics. To offset funding gaps, private insurers may also absorb additional costs, creating ripple effects across the broader healthcare landscape.
For care teams, this means:
In this evolving environment, discharge planning becomes even more central to both patient outcomes and system stability.
With mounting pressure on shorter hospital stays, ensuring appropriate support following discharge is vitally important. Patients returning home with complex medication regimens, mobility limitations, cognitive impairment, or multiple chronic conditions remain especially vulnerable during the first days and weeks after hospitalization. Without adequate support, the risk of complications — and readmissions — increases.
This is where high-quality home care plays a pivotal role. Reliable in-home support helps reinforce discharge instructions, monitor changes in condition, assist with activities of daily living, and provide consistent oversight that reduces avoidable returns to the hospital.
As reimbursement models become increasingly value-driven, home care becomes a strategic extension of the care continuum. Home care can help bridge the gap between hospital and home by providing:
“As hospitals adapt to new reimbursement realities, reliable home care partnerships become even more essential,” says Mitch Markowitz, Vice President of Business Development at Family & Nursing Care. “When patients are discharged sooner, they need thoughtful, coordinated support at home to ensure stability and prevent avoidable returns to the hospital.”
For nearly six decades, Family & Nursing Care has partnered with hospitals, Aging Life Care Professionals, and senior living communities to facilitate safe, seamless transitions home. We’re ready to activate care quickly, support complex and high-acuity clients, and collaborate closely with healthcare partners to promote continuity and stability.
As Maryland’s hospital reimbursement landscape shifts, dependable post-acute partnerships will play an increasingly important role in protecting patient outcomes. We remain committed to serving as a responsive, collaborative resource for hospitals navigating these changes.
To learn more about how we support care teams and coordinated transitions, visit the Family & Nursing Care Professional Partnerships and Home Care Services webpages.