评估因大量子宫出血而住院的妇科患者贫血的患病率及影响。

John Morrison, Snehal T. Patel, Wendy Watson, Qasim R Zaidi, A. Mangione, T. Goss
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引用次数: 31

摘要

目的子宫大量出血的妇女贫血往往未经治疗或治疗不充分。本研究旨在评估因大量子宫出血而住院的妇科患者中贫血的患病率和影响。研究设计:使用国际疾病分类第九版临床修改(ICD-9-CM)代码对最大的全付费住院病人数据库——医疗成本与利用项目2003年全国住院病人样本进行查询,以识别并将妇科诊断与子宫重度出血相关的妇女分为两类:有贫血和无贫血。采用描述性统计评估各组人口统计学特征、医疗资源利用和住院费用。结果在300,589名参与研究的女性中,超过25%的人被诊断为贫血。与未诊断为贫血的患者相比,诊断为贫血的患者更有可能输血(24%对0.7%,p<0.0001),更有可能进入急诊室(26.8%对3.2%,p<0.0001),住院费用更高(5,631美元对5,101美元,p<0.0001)。结论子宫大出血伴妇科住院妇女常见贫血和输血。提高患者和医护人员对贫血的患病率和与贫血相关的负担的认识,可能会增加减少输血的机会,并改善这一患者群体的总体健康状况和生活质量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Assessment of the prevalence and impact of anemia on women hospitalized for gynecologic conditions associated with heavy uterine bleeding.
OBJECTIVE Women with heavy uterine bleeding often are untreated or inadequately treated for anemia. This study was conducted to estimate the prevalence and impact of anemia in women hospitalized for gynecologic conditions associated with heavy uterine bleeding. STUDY DESIGN The largest all-payer inpatient care database, the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project's 2003 Nationwide Inpatient Sample, was queried using International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) codes to identify and group women with gynecologic diagnoses associated with heavy uterine bleeding into 2 categories: those with or without anemia. Groups were evaluated for demographic characteristics, medical resource utilization and hospitalization costs using descriptive statistics. RESULTS More than 25% of the estimated 300,589 women in the study had a diagnosis of anemia. Compared to patients without a diagnosis of anemia, those with an anemia diagnosis were more likely to have a blood transfusion (24% vs. 0.7%, p<0.0001), an emergency department admission (26.8% vs. 3.2%, p<0.0001) and higher hospitalization costs ($5,631 vs. $5,101, p <0.0001). CONCLUSIONS Anemia and blood transfusions are common in women hospitalized for gynecologic conditions associated with heavy uterine bleeding. Greater patient and provider awareness of the prevalence and burden associated with anemia may increase opportunities to reduce blood transfusions and improve general health status and quality of life in this patient population.
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