Medicare non-payment of hospital-acquired infections: infection rates three years post implementation.

Medicare & medicaid research review Pub Date : 2013-09-25 eCollection Date: 2013-01-01 DOI:10.5600/mmrr.003.03.a08
Samuel K Peasah, Niccie L McKay, Jeffrey S Harman, Mona Al-Amin, Robert L Cook
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Abstract

Background: Medicare ceased payment for some hospital-acquired infections beginning October 1, 2008, following provisions in the Medicare Modernization Act of 2003 and the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005.

Objective: We examined the association of this policy with declines in rates of vascular catheter-associated infections (VCAI) and catheter-associated urinary tract infection (CAUTI).

Data: Discharge data from the Florida Agency for Healthcare Administration from 2007 to 2011.

Study design: We compared rates of hospital-acquired vascular catheter-associated infections (HA-VCAI) and catheter-associated urinary tract infections (HA-CAUTI) before and after implementation of the new policy (January 2007 to September 2008 vs. October 2008 to September 2011). This pre-post, retrospective, interrupted time series study was further analyzed with a generalized hierarchical logistic regression, by estimating the probability of a patient acquiring these infections in the hospital, post-policy compared to pre-policy.

Principal findings: Pre-policy, 0.12% of admitted patients were diagnosed with CAUTI; of these, 32% were HA-CAUTI. Similarly, 0.24% of admissions were diagnosed as VCAI; of these, 60% were HA-VCAI. Post-policy, 0.16% of admissions were CAUTIs; of these, 31% were HA-CAUTI. Similarly, 0.3% of admissions were VCAIs and, of these, 45% were HA-VCAI. There was a statistically significant decrease in HA-VCAIs (OR: 0.571 (p < 0.0001)) post-policy, but the reduction in HA-CAUTI (OR: 0.968 (p < 0.4484)) was not statistically significant.

Conclusions: The results suggest Medicare non payment policy is associated with both a decline in the rate of hospital-acquired VCAI (HA-VCAI) per quarter, and the probability of acquiring HA-VCAI post- policy. The strength of the association could be overestimated, because of concurrent ongoing infection control interventions.

医疗保险不支付医院感染费用:实施三年后的感染率。
背景:根据《2003 年医疗保险现代化法案》和《2005 年赤字削减法案》的规定,医疗保险从 2008 年 10 月 1 日起停止支付部分医院感染的费用:我们研究了这一政策与血管导管相关感染(VCAI)和导管相关尿路感染(CAUTI)发病率下降之间的关系:研究设计:我们比较了新政策实施前后(2007 年 1 月至 2008 年 9 月与 2008 年 10 月至 2011 年 9 月)医院获得性血管导管相关感染(HA-VCAI)和导管相关尿路感染(HA-CAUTI)的发生率。这项前后回顾性间断时间序列研究采用广义层次逻辑回归法进行了进一步分析,估算了与政策实施前相比,政策实施后患者在医院内感染这些疾病的概率:政策实施前,0.12% 的入院患者被诊断为 CAUTI,其中 32% 为 HA-CAUTI。同样,0.24% 的入院病人被诊断为 VCAI;其中 60% 为 HA-VCAI。政策实施后,0.16% 的入院患者被诊断为 CAUTI,其中 31% 为 HA-CAUTI。同样,0.3% 的住院病例为 VCAI,其中 45% 为 HA-VCAI。政策实施后,HA-VCAIs 的下降幅度在统计学上有显著意义(OR:0.571 (p < 0.0001)),但 HA-CAUTI 的下降幅度(OR:0.968 (p < 0.4484))在统计学上没有显著意义:结果表明,医疗保险非支付政策与每季度医院获得性 VCAI(HA-VCAI)发生率的下降以及政策实施后获得 HA-VCAI 的概率均有关联。由于同时进行感染控制干预,这种关联的强度可能被高估。
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