Kuo Yong-Fang, Sharma Gulshan, Freeman Jean L, Goodwin James S
Department of Internal Medicine and the Sealy Center on Aging, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston 77555-0460, USA.
N Engl J Med. 2009 Mar 12;360(11):1102-12. doi: 10.1056/NEJMsa0802381.
National and population-based information on the increase in patient care by hospitalists in the United States is lacking.
Using a 5% sample of Medicare beneficiaries in 1995, 1997, 1999, and the period from 2001 through 2006, we identified 120,226 physicians in general internal medicine who were providing care to older patients in 5800 U.S. hospitals. We defined hospitalists as general internists who derived 90% or more of their Medicare claims for evaluation-and-management services from the care of hospitalized patients. We then calculated the percentage of all inpatient Medicare services provided by hospitalists and identified patient and hospital characteristics associated with the receipt of hospitalist services.
The percentage of physicians in general internal medicine who were identified as hospitalists increased from 5.9% in 1995 to 19.0% in 2006, and the percentage of all claims for inpatient evaluation-and-management services by general internists that were attributed to hospitalists increased from 9.1% to 37.1% during this same period. Accompanying the increase in care by hospitalists was an increase in the percentage of all hospitalized Medicare patients who were treated by general internists (both hospitalists and traditional, non-hospital-based general internists), from 46.4% in 1995 to 61.0% in 2006. In a multilevel, multivariable analysis controlling for patient and hospital characteristics, the odds of receiving care from a hospitalist increased by 29.2% per year from 1997 through 2006. In 2006, there was marked geographic variation in the rates of care provided by hospitalists, with rates of more than 70% in some hospital-referral regions.
These analyses of data from Medicare claims showed a substantial increase in the care of hospitalized patients by hospitalist physicians from 1995 to 2006.
美国缺乏基于全国和人群的有关医院医生提供患者护理情况增长的信息。
利用1995年、1997年、1999年以及2001年至2006年期间5%的医疗保险受益人的样本,我们在5800家美国医院中确定了120226名从事普通内科工作且为老年患者提供护理的医生。我们将医院医生定义为那些医疗保险评估与管理服务索赔中90%或更多来自住院患者护理的普通内科医生。然后我们计算了医院医生提供的所有住院医疗保险服务的百分比,并确定了与接受医院医生服务相关的患者和医院特征。
被确定为医院医生的普通内科医生的比例从1995年的5.9%增至2006年的19.0%,同期普通内科医生所有住院评估与管理服务索赔中归因于医院医生的比例从9.1%增至37.1%。随着医院医生提供护理的增加,所有住院医疗保险患者中由普通内科医生(包括医院医生和传统的、非医院工作的普通内科医生)治疗的比例从1995年的46.4%增至2006年的61.0%。在一项控制患者和医院特征的多水平、多变量分析中,从1997年到2006年,接受医院医生护理的几率每年增加29.2%。2006年,医院医生提供护理的比例存在显著的地理差异,在一些医院转诊地区比例超过70%。
这些对医疗保险索赔数据的分析表明,从1995年到2006年,医院医生对住院患者的护理有大幅增加。