A community hospital in Kentucky has found that employing lay outreach workers to assist patients recently discharged from the hospital can significantly reduce hospital readmissions.
In a research project, the hospital identified high-risk patients and, upon their discharge from the hospital, assigned lay outreach workers to help those patients with matters such as providing transportation, assisting during follow-up medical appointments, and navigating the health care system. With this help, the hospital experienced a 48 percent reduction in 30-day readmissions.

Learn more about the project, its methodology, and its findings in the article “Reducing 30-day readmission rates in a high-risk population using a lay-health worker model in Appalachia Kentucky,” which can be found here in the journal Health Education Research.

