van Walraven Carl, Mamdani Muhammad, Fang Jiming, Austin Peter C
Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
J Gen Intern Med. 2004 Jun;19(6):624-31. doi: 10.1111/j.1525-1497.2004.30082.x.
Patients are often treated in hospital by physicians other than their regular community doctor. After they are discharged, their care is often returned to their regular community doctor and patients may not see the hospital physician. Transfer of information between physicians can be poor. We determined whether early postdischarge outcomes changed when patients were seen after discharge by physicians who treated them in the hospital.
This cohort study used population-based administrative databases to follow 938833 adults from Ontario, Canada, after they were discharged alive from a nonelective medical or surgical hospitalization between April 1, 1995, and March 1, 2000. We determined when patients were seen after discharge by physicians who treated them in the hospital, physicians who treated them 3 months prior to admission (community physicians), and specialists. The outcome of interest was 30-day death or nonelective readmission to hospital.
Of patients studied, 7.7% died or were readmitted. The adjusted relative risk of death or readmission decreased by 5% (95% confidence interval [CI], 4% to 5%) and 3% (95% CI, 2% to 3%) with each additional visit to a hospital physician rather than a community physician or specialist, respectively. The effect of hospital physician visits was cumulative, with the adjusted risk of 30-day death or nonelective readmission reduced to 7.3%, 7.0%, and 6.7% if patients had 1, 2, or 3 visits, respectively, with a hospital rather than a community physician. The effect was consistent across important subgroups.
Patient outcomes could be improved if their early postdischarge visits were with physicians who treated them in hospital rather than with other physicians. Follow-up visits with a hospital physician, rather than another physician, could be a modifiable factor to improve patient outcomes following discharge from hospital.
患者在医院接受治疗时,常常由其社区常规医生以外的医生负责。出院后,他们的护理通常又转回给社区常规医生,患者可能不会再见到医院的医生。医生之间的信息传递可能不佳。我们研究了出院后由曾在医院为其治疗的医生进行诊治时,患者出院后的早期结局是否会有所改变。
这项队列研究利用基于人群的行政数据库,对1995年4月1日至2000年3月1日期间在加拿大安大略省因非选择性医疗或外科住院治疗后存活出院的938833名成年人进行随访。我们确定了患者出院后由曾在医院为其治疗的医生、入院前3个月为其治疗的医生(社区医生)以及专科医生进行诊治的时间。感兴趣的结局是30天内死亡或非选择性再次入院。
在研究的患者中,7.7%死亡或再次入院。与社区医生或专科医生相比,每次额外就诊于医院医生,死亡或再次入院的校正相对风险分别降低5%(95%置信区间[CI],4%至5%)和3%(95%CI,2%至3%)。医院医生就诊的效果是累积的,如果患者分别就诊于医院医生1次、2次或3次而非社区医生,30天死亡或非选择性再次入院的校正风险分别降至7.3%、7.0%和6.7%。这种效果在重要亚组中是一致的。
如果患者出院后的早期就诊是由曾在医院为其治疗的医生而非其他医生进行,患者结局可能会得到改善。由医院医生而非其他医生进行随访就诊,可能是改善患者出院后结局的一个可改变因素。