Hospital Care for Adult Patients with Congenital Heart Diseases.

IF 0.7 4区 医学 Q4 CARDIAC & CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEMS
Alicia J Johnson, Lidija B McGrath, Abigail M Khan, Craig S Broberg, Yoshio Otaki, Irving Shen, Ashok Muralidaran, Castigliano M Bhamidipati
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: The ideal type of hospital to care for adult congenital heart disease (ACHD) patients is not well known. Hospital competitiveness, clinical volume and market structure can influence clinical outcomes. We sought to understand how hospital competitiveness affects clinical outcomes in ACHD patients in the era prior to the Adult Congenital Heart Association accreditation program.

Methods: Patient discharges with ACHD diagnosis codes were filtered between 2006-2011 from an all-payer inpatient healthcare database. Hospital-level data was linked to market structure patient flow. A common measure of market concentration used to determine market competitiveness-the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI)-was stratified into: more competitive (HHI ≤25th percentile), moderately competitive (HHI 25th to <75th percentile), and less competitive (HHI ≥75th percentile) hospital. Any complication, home discharge and mortality were analyzed with clustered mixed effects logistic regression. The combined impact of HHI and any complication on mortality by interaction was assessed.

Results: A total of 67,434 patient discharges were isolated. More competitive hospitals discharged the least number of patients (N = 15,270, 22.6%) versus moderately competitive (N = 36,244, 53.7%) and less competitive (N = 15,920, 23.6%) hospitals. The adjusted odds of any complication or home discharge were not associated with hospital competitiveness strata. Compared to more competitive hospitals, mortality at moderately competitive hospitals (Adjusted Odds Ratio (AOR) 0.79, 95% CI: 0.66-0.94) and less competitive hospitals (AOR 0.79, 95% CI: 0.63-0.98) were lower (p = 0.025). Age, race, elective admission, transfer status, and payer mix were all significantly associated with adjusted odds of any complication, home discharge and mortality (p ≤ 0.05). Having any complication independently increased the adjusted odds of mortality more than 6-fold (p < 0.001), and this trend was independent of HHI strata. Failure to rescue an ACHD patient from mortality after having any complication is highest at less competitive hospitals. Sensitivity analysis which excluded the transfer status variable, showed that any complication (p = 0.047) and mortality (p = 0.01) were independently associated with HHI strata.

Conclusions: Whether lower competition allow hospitals to focus more on quality of care is unknown. Hospital competitiveness and outcome seem to have an inverse trend relationship among ACHD patients. Since medical care is frequently provided away from the home area, hospital selection is an important issue for ACHD patients. Further research is needed to determine why competitiveness is linked to surgical outcomes in this population.

先天性心脏病成人患者的住院治疗。
目的:治疗成人先天性心脏病(ACHD)患者的理想医院类型尚不十分清楚。医院竞争力、临床量和市场结构都会影响临床结果。我们试图了解在成人先天性心脏病协会认证计划之前,医院竞争力如何影响 ACHD 患者的临床治疗效果:方法:我们从所有付费者住院医疗数据库中筛选出 2006-2011 年间带有 ACHD 诊断代码的出院患者。医院层面的数据与市场结构患者流量相关联。市场集中度是衡量市场竞争力的常用指标--赫芬达尔-赫希曼指数(HHI)--被分为:竞争力较强(HHI ≤25百分位数)、竞争力中等(HHI 25分位数至结果:共分离出 67,434 例出院患者。竞争力较强的医院与竞争力一般的医院(N = 36,244, 53.7%)和竞争力较弱的医院(N = 15,920, 23.6%)相比,出院患者人数最少(N = 15,270, 22.6%)。任何并发症或出院回家的调整后几率与医院竞争力层级无关。与竞争力较强的医院相比,竞争力一般的医院(调整后的几率比(AOR)0.79,95% CI:0.66-0.94)和竞争力较弱的医院(AOR 0.79,95% CI:0.63-0.98)的死亡率较低(P = 0.025)。年龄、种族、择期入院、转院状态和支付方组合均与任何并发症、居家出院和死亡率的调整后几率显著相关(p ≤ 0.05)。出现任何并发症都会使调整后的死亡率几率增加 6 倍以上(p < 0.001),而且这一趋势与 HHI 分层无关。在竞争力较弱的医院中,发生任何并发症后未能抢救成功的 ACHD 患者死亡率最高。敏感性分析排除了转院状态这一变量,结果显示任何并发症(p = 0.047)和死亡率(p = 0.01)均与 HHI 阶层独立相关:结论:较低的竞争是否会使医院更加注重医疗质量尚不清楚。在 ACHD 患者中,医院竞争力与治疗效果似乎呈反向关系。由于医疗服务经常在家庭所在地以外的地区提供,因此医院的选择对于 ACHD 患者来说是一个重要问题。需要进一步研究,以确定竞争力为何与这一人群的手术效果有关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Heart Surgery Forum
Heart Surgery Forum 医学-外科
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
16.70%
发文量
130
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Heart Surgery Forum® is an international peer-reviewed, open access journal seeking original investigative and clinical work on any subject germane to the science or practice of modern cardiac care. The HSF publishes original scientific reports, collective reviews, case reports, editorials, and letters to the editor. New manuscripts are reviewed by reviewers for originality, content, relevancy and adherence to scientific principles in a double-blind process. The HSF features a streamlined submission and peer review process with an anticipated completion time of 30 to 60 days from the date of receipt of the original manuscript. Authors are encouraged to submit full color images and video that will be included in the web version of the journal at no charge.
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