The association between hospital care intensity and surgical outcomes in medicare patients. JAMA Surg 2014 Dec;149(12):1254-9
Date
10/02/2014Pubmed ID
25272279DOI
10.1001/jamasurg.2014.552Scopus ID
2-s2.0-84919682670 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site) 32 CitationsAbstract
IMPORTANCE: Hospitals' care intensity varies widely across the United States. Payers and policy makers have become focused on promoting quality, low-cost, efficient health care.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether increased hospital care intensity (HCI) is associated with improved outcomes following major surgery.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Using national Medicare data in this retrospective cohort study, we identified 706,520 patients at 2544 hospitals who underwent 1 of 7 major cardiovascular, orthopedic, or general surgical operations.
EXPOSURE: The HCI Index, which is validated and publicly available through the Dartmouth Atlas of Healthcare.
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Risk- and reliability-adjusted mortality, major complication, and failure-to-rescue rates.
RESULTS: Hospital care intensity varied 10-fold. High-HCI hospitals had greater rates of major complications when compared with low-HCI centers (risk ratio, 1.04; 95% CI, 1.03-1.05). There was a decrease in failure to rescue at high compared with low-HCI hospitals (risk ratio, 0.95; 95% CI, 0.94-0.97). Using multilevel-models, HCI reduced the variation in failure-to-rescue rates between hospitals by 2.7% after accounting for patient comorbidities and hospital resources. Patients treated at high-HCI hospitals had longer hospitalizations, more inpatient deaths, and lower hospice use during the last 2 years of life.
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Failure-to-rescue rates were lower at high-care intensity hospitals. Conversely, care intensity explains a very small proportion of variation in failure-to-rescue rates across hospitals.
Author List
Sheetz KH, Dimick JB, Ghaferi AAAuthor
Amir Ghaferi MD President, Phys Enterprise & SAD Clinical Affairs in the Medical College Physicians Administration department at Medical College of WisconsinMESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold
AgedFemale
Hospital Mortality
Hospitals
Humans
Incidence
Male
Medicare
Postoperative Care
Postoperative Complications
Quality Improvement
Registries
Reproducibility of Results
Retrospective Studies
Surgical Procedures, Operative
United States