医院和超级利用。

Q2 Medicine
Michael Howley, Prashant Srivastava
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在美国,一小部分患者使用了大部分医疗服务。这些超级使用情况会影响医院,但人们对超级使用是什么、对医院的影响以及医院如何识别潜在的超级使用情况知之甚少。我们利用 2019 年医疗支出面板调查(MEPS)数据集进行了探索性研究,以考察与医院有关的超级使用情况。我们使用医疗服务的总费用来识别超额使用,发现大量超额使用与医院护理无关,令人惊讶。当医院出现超额使用时,根据相对于收费的报销额度来衡量,超额使用中的护理报销额度会降低。人口统计学变量在预测超额使用方面的作用有限。我们的人口统计学分析表明,有一些潜在的超额使用病例并没有接受医院治疗。我们的分析表明,鉴于超常使用病例所需的护理量、高水平护理的报销额度降低以及超常使用的潜力尚未开发,医院应考虑发展管理这些具有挑战性病例的能力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Hospitals and Superutilization.

A small percentage of patients consume most of the health services in the US. These cases of superutilization affect hospitals, but little is known about what it is, the impact on hospitals, or how hospitals can identify potential cases of superutilization. We conducted exploratory research using the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS) datasets for 2019 to examine superutilization as it relates to hospitals. Using total charges for health services to identify superutilization, we found a surprising amount of superutilization was not related to hospital care. When superutilization did occur in hospitals, there was reduced reimbursement for care in superutilization as measured by the reimbursement relative to charges. Demographic variables had limited utility in predicting superutilization. Our demographic analysis suggested that there are potential cases of superutilization that are not accessing hospital care. Our analyses suggest that given the amount of care that cases of superutilization require, the decreased reimbursement for the high levels of care and the untapped potential of superutilization, hospitals should consider developing capabilities to manage these challenging cases.

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来源期刊
Hospital Topics
Hospital Topics Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
44
期刊介绍: Hospital Topics is the longest continuously published healthcare journal in the United States. Since 1922, Hospital Topics has provided healthcare professionals with research they can apply to improve the quality of access, management, and delivery of healthcare. Dedicated to those who bring healthcare to the public, Hospital Topics spans the whole spectrum of healthcare issues including, but not limited to information systems, fatigue management, medication errors, nursing compensation, midwifery, job satisfaction among managers, team building, and bringing primary care to rural areas. Through articles on theory, applied research, and practice, Hospital Topics addresses the central concerns of today"s healthcare professional and leader.
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