Division of Rheumatology, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA.
BMJ. 2010 Feb 11;340:c165. doi: 10.1136/bmj.c165.
To explore the relation between hospital orthopaedic specialisation and postoperative outcomes after total hip or knee replacement surgery.
Retrospective analysis of US Medicare data, 2001-5.
3818 US hospitals carrying out total joint replacement. Population 1 273 081 Medicare beneficiaries age 65 and older who underwent primary or revision hip or knee replacement.
Hospitals were stratified into fifths on the basis of their degree of orthopaedic specialisation (lowest fifth, least specialised; highest fifth, most specialised). The primary outcome was defined as a composite representing the occurrence of one or more of pulmonary embolism, deep vein thrombosis, haemorrhage, infection, myocardial infarction, or death within 90 days of the index surgery.
As hospital orthopaedic specialisation increased from the lowest fifth to highest fifth, the proportion of people admitted who were women or black, or who had diabetes or heart failure progressively decreased (P<0.001), whereas procedural volume increased. Compared with the most specialised hospitals (highest fifth), after adjustment for patient characteristics and hospital volume, the odds of adverse outcomes increased progressively with decreased hospital specialisation: lowest fifth (odds ratio 1.59, 95% confidence interval 1.53 to 1.65), second fifth (1.32, 1.28 to 1.36), third fifth (1.24, 1.21 to 1.28), and fourth fifth (1.10, 1.07 to 1.13).
Increased hospital orthopaedic specialisation is associated with improved patient outcomes after adjusting for both patient characteristics and hospital procedural volume. These results should be interpreted with caution because the possibility that other unmeasured confounders related to socioeconomic status or different factors are responsible for the improved patient outcomes rather than hospital specialisation can not be excluded. The findings suggest that hospital specialisation may capture different components of hospital quality than the components captured by hospital volume.
探讨医院矫形专业化与全髋关节或膝关节置换术后结局的关系。
美国医疗保险数据的回顾性分析,2001-5 年。
3818 家开展全关节置换术的美国医院。人群 1 为 273081 名年龄在 65 岁及以上的医疗保险受益人,他们接受了初次或翻修的髋关节或膝关节置换术。
根据医院矫形专业化程度将医院分为五等份(最低五分,最不专业;最高五分,最专业)。主要结局是指在索引手术后 90 天内发生的一种或多种肺栓塞、深静脉血栓形成、出血、感染、心肌梗死或死亡的复合结果。
随着医院矫形专业化程度从最低五分提高到最高五分,接受治疗的患者中女性或黑人、糖尿病或心力衰竭患者的比例逐渐下降(P<0.001),而手术量则逐渐增加。与最专业的医院(最高五分)相比,在调整患者特征和医院容量后,随着医院专业化程度的降低,不良结局的可能性逐渐增加:最低五分(比值比 1.59,95%置信区间 1.53 至 1.65)、第二五分(1.32,1.28 至 1.36)、第三五分(1.24,1.21 至 1.28)和第四五分(1.10,1.07 至 1.13)。
在调整患者特征和医院手术量后,医院矫形专业化程度的提高与患者预后的改善相关。由于其他未测量的与社会经济地位或不同因素相关的混杂因素可能导致患者预后改善而不是医院专业化,因此应谨慎解释这些结果。这些发现表明,医院专业化可能比医院容量所捕获的医院质量的不同组成部分更能捕获医院质量的不同组成部分。