inbox/queue/ (52 unprocessed) — landing zone for new sources
inbox/archive/{domain}/ (311 processed) — organized by domain
inbox/null-result/ (174) — reviewed, nothing extractable
One-time atomic migration. All paths preserved (wiki links use stems).
Pentagon-Agent: Epimetheus <968B2991-E2DF-4006-B962-F5B0A0CC8ACA>
5.3 KiB
| type | title | author | url | date | domain | secondary_domains | format | status | priority | tags | processed_by | processed_date | enrichments_applied | extraction_model | extraction_notes | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| source | The Cost-Effectiveness of Homecare Services for Adults and Older Adults: A Systematic Review | PMC / Multiple authors | https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9960182/ | 2023-02-01 | health | paper | null-result | high |
|
vida | 2026-03-11 |
|
anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5 | Extracted three claims about home health cost advantage, SNF margin bifurcation as transition signal, and RPM market growth. Applied enrichments to three existing claims about continuous monitoring, healthcare attractor state, and value-based care transitions. The 52% cost differential for heart failure home care is the strongest extractable finding—it represents structural cost advantage, not marginal improvement. SNF bifurcation (36% deeply unprofitable, 34% profitable) is a clear signal of industry restructuring rather than uniform decline. RPM growth data provides the technology enablement layer that makes home-based care clinically viable. |
Content
Cost Efficiency Findings
- Home health interventions typically more cost-efficient than institutional care
- Potential savings exceeding $15,000 per patient per year vs. facility-based care
- Heart failure patients receiving home care: costs 52% lower than traditional hospital treatments
- When homecare compared to hospital care: cost-saving in 7 studies, cost-effective in 2, more effective in 1
- 94% of Medicare beneficiaries prefer post-hospital care at home vs. nursing homes
Market Shift Projections
- Up to $265 billion in care services for Medicare beneficiaries projected to shift to home care by 2025
- Home healthcare segment is fastest-growing end-use in RPM market (25.3% CAGR through 2033)
Care Delivery Spectrum Economics
Hospital → SNF → Home Health → PACE → Hospice
- Value concentrating toward lower-acuity, community-based settings
- SNF sector in margin crisis: 36% of SNFs have margin of -4.0% or worse, while 34% at 4%+ (growing divergence)
- Hospital-at-home and home health models capturing volume from institutional settings
Technology Enablers
- Remote patient monitoring: $28.9B (2024) → projected $138B (2033), 19% CAGR
- AI in RPM: $1.96B (2024) → $8.43B (2030), 27.5% CAGR
- Home healthcare as fastest-growing RPM segment (25.3% CAGR)
- 71 million Americans expected to use some form of RPM by 2025
Agent Notes
Why this matters: The cost data makes the case that home health is the structural winner in senior care — not because of ideology but because of economics. 52% lower costs for heart failure home care vs. hospital is not marginal; it's a different cost structure entirely. Combined with 94% patient preference, this is demand + economics pointing the same direction. What surprised me: The SNF margin divergence. A third of SNFs are deeply unprofitable while a third are profitable — this is the hallmark of an industry in structural transition, not one that's uniformly declining. The winners are likely those aligned with VBC models. KB connections: the healthcare attractor state is a prevention-first system where aligned payment continuous monitoring and AI-augmented care delivery create a flywheel that profits from health rather than sickness, continuous health monitoring is converging on a multi-layer sensor stack of ambient wearables periodic patches and environmental sensors processed through AI middleware Extraction hints: Claims about: (1) home health as structural cost winner vs. facility-based care, (2) SNF bifurcation as indicator of care delivery transition, (3) $265B care shift toward home as market structure transformation
Curator Notes
PRIMARY CONNECTION: continuous health monitoring is converging on a multi-layer sensor stack of ambient wearables periodic patches and environmental sensors processed through AI middleware WHY ARCHIVED: Fills the care delivery layer gap — KB has claims about insurance/payment structure but not about where care is actually delivered and how that's changing. EXTRACTION HINT: The cost differential (52% for heart failure) is the most extractable finding. Pair with RPM growth data to show the enabling technology layer.
Key Facts
- 94% of Medicare beneficiaries prefer post-hospital care at home vs. nursing homes
- Home health interventions typically more cost-efficient than institutional care across multiple conditions
- When homecare compared to hospital care: cost-saving in 7 studies, cost-effective in 2, more effective in 1
- 71 million Americans expected to use some form of RPM by 2025
- AI in RPM: $1.96B (2024) → $8.43B (2030), 27.5% CAGR