Volume creates value: The volume-outcome relationship in Scandinavian obesity surgery.

IF 1.6 Q3 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Health Services Management Research Pub Date : 2022-11-01 Epub Date: 2022-02-06 DOI:10.1177/09514848211048598
Anna Svarts, Thorell Anders, Mats Engwall
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Abstract

This study establishes the relationship between surgical volume and cost and quality outcomes, using patient-level clinical data from a national quality registry for bariatric surgery in Sweden. Data include patient characteristics with comorbidities, surgical and follow-up data for patients that underwent gastric bypass or gastric sleeve operations between 2007 and 2016 (52,703 patients in 51 hospitals). The relationships between surgical volume (annual number of bariatric procedures) and several patient-level outcomes were assessed using multilevel, mixed-effect regression models, controlling for patient characteristics and comorbidities. We found that hospitals with higher volumes had lower risk of intraoperative complications as well as complications within 30 days post-surgery (odds ratios per 100 procedures are 0.78 and 0.87, respectively, p<0.01). In addition, higher-volume hospitals had substantially shorter procedure time (17 min per 100 procedures, p<0.01) and length of stay (0.88 incidence-rate ratio per 100 procedures p<0.01). Our results support the claim that increased surgical volume significantly improves quality. Further, the results strongly suggest that increased volume leads to lower cost per surgery, by reducing cost drivers such as procedure time and length of stay.

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数量创造价值:斯堪的纳维亚肥胖症手术中的手术量与手术结果之间的关系。
本研究利用瑞典全国减肥手术质量登记处的患者临床数据,确定了手术量与成本和质量结果之间的关系。数据包括2007年至2016年间接受胃旁路手术或胃袖状手术的患者(51家医院的52703名患者)的合并症、手术和随访数据。我们使用多层次混合效应回归模型评估了手术量(年度减肥手术数量)与几种患者层面结果之间的关系,并对患者特征和合并症进行了控制。我们发现,手术量越大的医院,术中并发症以及术后 30 天内并发症的风险越低(每 100 例手术的几率比分别为 0.78 和 0.87,ppp
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来源期刊
Health Services Management Research
Health Services Management Research HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES-
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
4.80%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: Health Services Management Research (HSMR) is an authoritative international peer-reviewed journal which publishes theoretically and empirically rigorous research on questions of enduring interest to health-care organizations and systems throughout the world. Examining the real issues confronting health services management, it provides an independent view and cutting edge evidence-based research to guide policy-making and management decision-making. HSMR aims to be a forum serving an international community of academics and researchers on the one hand and healthcare managers, executives, policymakers and clinicians and all health professionals on the other. HSMR wants to make a substantial contribution to both research and managerial practice, with particular emphasis placed on publishing studies which offer actionable findings and on promoting knowledge mobilisation toward theoretical advances.
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