Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143-0728, USA.
J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2010 Nov 17;92(16):2643-52. doi: 10.2106/JBJS.I.01477.
The relationship between surgeon and hospital procedure volumes and clinical outcomes in total joint arthroplasty has long fueled a debate over regionalization of care. At the same time, numerous policy initiatives are focusing on improving quality by incentivizing surgeons to adhere to evidence-based processes of care. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the independent contributions of surgeon procedure volume, hospital procedure volume, and standardization of care on short-term postoperative outcomes and resource utilization in lower-extremity total joint arthroplasty.
An analysis of 182,146 consecutive patients who underwent primary total joint arthroplasty was performed with use of data entered into the Perspective database by 3421 physicians from 312 hospitals over a two-year period. Adherence to evidence-based processes of care was defined by administration of appropriate perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis, beta-blockade, and venous thromboembolism prophylaxis. Patient outcomes included mortality, length of hospital stay, discharge disposition, surgical complications, readmissions, and reoperations within the first thirty days after discharge. Hierarchical models were used to estimate the effects of hospital and surgeon procedure volume and process standardization on individual and combined surgical outcomes and length of stay.
After adjustment in multivariate models, higher surgeon volume was associated with lower risk of complications, lower rates of readmission and reoperation, shorter length of hospital stay, and higher likelihood of being discharged home. Higher hospital volume was associated with lower risk of mortality, lower risk of readmission, and higher likelihood of being discharged home. The impact of process standardization was substantial; maximizing adherence to evidence-based processes of care resulted in improved clinical outcomes and shorter length of hospital stay, independent of hospital or surgeon procedure volume.
Although surgeon and hospital procedure volumes are unquestionably correlated with patient outcomes in total joint arthroplasty, process standardization is also strongly associated with improved quality and efficiency of care. The exact relationship between individual processes of care and patient outcomes has not been established; however, our findings suggest that process standardization could help providers optimize quality and efficiency in total joint arthroplasty, independent of hospital or surgeon volume.
外科医生和医院手术量与全关节置换术临床结果之间的关系长期以来一直引发了关于护理区域化的争论。与此同时,许多政策举措都专注于通过激励外科医生遵循循证护理流程来提高质量。本研究的目的是评估外科医生手术量、医院手术量和护理标准化对下肢全关节置换术后短期结果和资源利用的独立贡献。
对在两年期间内,3421 名医生在 312 家医院使用 Perspective 数据库输入的数据进行了 182146 例连续初次全关节置换术患者的分析。通过适当的围手术期抗生素预防、β受体阻滞剂和静脉血栓栓塞预防来确定对循证护理流程的依从性。患者的结果包括死亡率、住院时间、出院去向、手术并发症、再入院和出院后 30 天内再次手术。使用层次模型来估计医院和外科医生手术量和流程标准化对个体和联合手术结果和住院时间的影响。
在多变量模型中进行调整后,较高的外科医生手术量与较低的并发症风险、较低的再入院和再次手术率、较短的住院时间和更高的出院回家可能性相关。较高的医院手术量与较低的死亡率风险、较低的再入院风险和更高的出院回家可能性相关。流程标准化的影响很大;最大限度地遵守循证护理流程可改善临床结果并缩短住院时间,独立于医院或外科医生的手术量。
尽管外科医生和医院手术量无疑与全关节置换术患者的结果相关,但流程标准化也与护理质量和效率的提高密切相关。单个护理流程与患者结果之间的确切关系尚未确定;然而,我们的研究结果表明,流程标准化可以帮助提供者在全关节置换术中优化质量和效率,独立于医院或外科医生的手术量。