Ward Marcia M, Jaana Mirou, Wakefield Douglas S, Ohsfeldt Robert L, Schneider John E, Miller Thomas, Lei Yang
Department of Health Management and Policy, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242-1008, USA.
J Rural Health. 2004 Fall;20(4):344-54. doi: 10.1111/j.1748-0361.2004.tb00048.x.
Volume of certain surgical procedures has been linked to patient outcomes. The Leapfrog Group and others have recommended evidence-based referral using specific volume thresholds for nonemergent cases. The literature is limited on the effect of such referral on hospitals, especially in rural areas.
To examine the impact of evidence-based referral by volume standard for 5 hospital procedures (abdominal aortic artery repair, coronary angioplasty, coronary artery bypass graft, esophageal cancer surgery, and pancreatic resection) in a largely rural state.
Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project Iowa State Inpatient Dataset was analyzed to identify hospitals meeting the volume standard versus those not meeting the standard.
Relatively few hospitals perform these procedures in Iowa. Hospitals performing the procedures at a volume above the threshold standard set by the Leapfrog Group tend to be larger, receive more transfers from other hospitals for these procedures, and perform fewer of these procedures on an emergency basis. In Iowa, hospitals that met the volume standard did not differ from hospitals that did not meet the volume standard in risk-adjusted mortality rates. The impact of evidence-based referral would be substantial in terms of travel time for some procedures (ie, coronary artery bypass graft, pancreatic resection, and esophageal cancer surgery) and produce considerable lost revenue for some hospitals.
Evidence-based referral would be associated with substantial burden for some patients and hospitals in Iowa. This negative impact does not appear to be offset by improvement in in-hospital mortality rates. These initial findings suggest that there are a number of issues that need to be considered, especially in a rural state, before evidence-based referral is embraced as a means to enhance patient outcomes.
某些外科手术的手术量与患者预后相关。“跨越组织”及其他机构建议,对于非紧急情况,应使用特定的手术量阈值进行循证转诊。关于这种转诊对医院,尤其是农村地区医院的影响,相关文献有限。
研究在一个以农村人口为主的州,对5种医院手术(腹主动脉修复术、冠状动脉血管成形术、冠状动脉搭桥术、食管癌手术和胰腺切除术)采用基于手术量标准的循证转诊的影响。
分析医疗成本与利用项目爱荷华州住院患者数据集,以确定达到手术量标准的医院与未达标准的医院。
在爱荷华州,相对较少的医院开展这些手术。手术量高于“跨越组织”设定的阈值标准的医院往往规模更大,因这些手术从其他医院接收的转诊患者更多,且急诊开展的此类手术更少。在爱荷华州,达到手术量标准的医院与未达标准的医院在风险调整死亡率方面并无差异。就某些手术(即冠状动脉搭桥术、胰腺切除术和食管癌手术)而言,循证转诊对出行时间的影响将是巨大的,且会给一些医院带来可观的收入损失。
在爱荷华州,循证转诊会给一些患者和医院带来沉重负担。这种负面影响似乎并未因住院死亡率的改善而得到抵消。这些初步研究结果表明,在将循证转诊作为改善患者预后的手段之前,有许多问题需要考虑。尤其在一个以农村人口为主的州。