美国在线外科医生评分与患者术后结果之间的关系。

Raj Satkunasivam, Carlos Riveros, Michael Geng, Refik Saskin, Ruixin Li, Renil S Titus, Natalie Coburn, Avery Nathens, Benjamin N Breyer, Dharam Kaushik, Angela Jerath, Allan S Detsky, Yusuke Tsugawa, Christopher J D Wallis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:确定评分是否与术后预后相关。背景:患者的在线评分或列入杰出医生名单是公开的。方法:在这项回顾性研究中,分析了2016年至2019年期间在美国接受14项重大(选择性/紧急)手术之一的65至99岁的医疗保险服务收费受益人。数据分析时间为2023年9月至2024年3月。使用计算方法从三个最高容量的公开可用的患者发起和同行提名的评分平台中提取外科医生评分。感兴趣的暴露是患者发起平台上的评分(0- 4,4 -4.49,≥4.5)和同行提名平台上的“顶级医生”状态。主要终点为30天死亡率。次要结局包括30天并发症、再入院、抢救失败和住院时间。使用线性概率模型,我们控制了患者、外科医生和医院因素,以检查评分和结果之间的关联。结果:57,008名外科医生对2,690,315例患者进行了手术。患者主动评分与30天死亡率并不一致相关,但在B平台上评分为4至4.49的外科医生治疗的患者中,与较低的死亡率显著相关[校正风险差(ARD), - 0.06%(95%置信区间(CI) = -0.11至-0.01)]。通过同行提名的“顶级医生”外科医生治疗的患者30天死亡率较低,为- 0.14% (95% CI = -0.19至-0.09)。具有较高患者主动评分的外科医生30天并发症和再入院率较低,而“顶级医生”的抢救失败率较低。结论:患者发起和同行提名的评分与并发症和再入院有关;分别是死亡率和抢救失败,表明它们涵盖了手术护理的不同方面。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Association Between Online Surgeon Ratings and Patients' Postoperative Outcomes in the United States.

Objective: To determine whether ratings are associated with postoperative outcomes.

Background: Online ratings by patients or inclusion on lists of exceptional physicians are publicly available.

Methods: In this retrospective study, Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries 65 to 99 years old undergoing one of 14 major (elective/emergent) surgeries in the United States between 2016 and 2019 were analyzed. Data were analyzed from September 2023 to March 2024. Using computational methods to extract surgeon ratings from the three highest-volume publicly available patient-initiated and peer-nominated rating platforms. The exposure of interest was ratings (0-4, 4-4.49, ≥ 4.5) on patient-initiated platforms and "Top Doctor" status on the peer-nominated platform. The primary outcome was 30-day mortality. Secondary outcomes included 30-day complications, readmission, failure to rescue, and hospital length of stay. Using linear probability models, we controlled for patient, surgeon, and hospital factors to examine associations between ratings and outcomes.

Results: We identified 2,690,315 patients operated on by 57,008 surgeons. Patient-initiated ratings were not consistently associated with 30-day mortality but were significantly associated with lower mortality among those treated by surgeons rated 4 to 4.49 on Platform B [adjusted risk difference (ARD), -0.06 % (95% confidence interval (CI) = -0.11 to -0.01)]. Patients treated by "Top Doctor" surgeons through peer-nomination had lower 30-day mortality ARD, -0.14 % (95% CI = -0.19 to -0.09). Surgeons with higher patient-initiated ratings had lower rates of 30-day complications and readmissions, while "Top Doctors" experienced lower rates of failure to rescue.

Conclusions: Patient-initiated and peer-nominated ratings were associated with complications and readmission; mortality and failure to rescue, respectively, suggesting they capture different aspects of surgical care.

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