Leonard D. Schaeffer Center for Health Policy and Economics, University of Southern California, 650 Childs Way, Los Angeles, CA 90089, USA.
Ann Intern Med. 2011 Feb 1;154(3):160-7. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-154-3-201102010-00005.
Evidence shows that high Medicare spending is not associated with better health outcomes at a regional level and that high spending in hospitals is not associated with better process quality. The relationship between hospital spending and inpatient mortality is less well understood.
To determine the association between hospital spending and risk-adjusted inpatient mortality.
Retrospective cohort study.
Database of discharge records from 1999 to 2008 for 208 California hospitals included in The Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care.
2 545 352 patients hospitalized during 1999 to 2008 with 1 of 6 major medical conditions.
Inpatient mortality rates among patients admitted to hospitals with varying levels of end-of-life hospital spending.
For each of 6 diagnoses at admission-acute myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, acute stroke, gastrointestinal hemorrhage, hip fracture, and pneumonia-patient admission to hig her-spending hospitals was associated with lower risk-adjusted inpatient mortality. During 1999 to 2003, for example, patients admitted with acute myocardial infarction to California hospitals in the highest quintile of hospital spending had lower inpatient mortality than did those admitted to hospitals in the lowest quintile (odds ratio, 0.862 [95% CI, 0.742 to 0.983]). Predicted inpatient deaths would increase by 1831 if all patients admitted with acute myocardial infarction were cared for in hospitals in the lowest quintile of spending rather than the highest. The association between hospital spending and inpatient mortality did not vary by region or hospital size.
Unobserved predictors of mortality create uncertainty about whether greater inpatient hospital spending leads to lower inpatient mortality.
Hospitals that spend more have lower inpatient mortality for 6 common medical conditions.
有证据表明,在区域层面上,医疗保险支出高并不与更好的健康结果相关,而医院支出高并不与更好的治疗过程质量相关。医院支出与住院患者死亡率之间的关系则了解较少。
确定医院支出与风险调整后住院患者死亡率之间的关联。
回顾性队列研究。
纳入 1999 年至 2008 年 208 家加利福尼亚医院出院记录的达特茅斯医疗保健地图数据库。
1999 年至 2008 年期间因 6 种主要医疗状况之一住院的 2545352 名患者。
不同临终关怀医院支出水平的患者住院死亡率。
在 6 种入院诊断(急性心肌梗死、充血性心力衰竭、急性中风、胃肠道出血、髋部骨折和肺炎)中,每一种诊断的患者入院至支出较高的医院,其风险调整后住院死亡率都较低。例如,1999 年至 2003 年,因急性心肌梗死入住加利福尼亚医院支出最高五分位数的患者,其住院死亡率低于入住支出最低五分位数的患者(比值比,0.862[95%CI,0.742 至 0.983])。如果所有因急性心肌梗死入院的患者都在支出最低五分位数的医院接受治疗,那么预计住院死亡人数将增加 1831 人。医院支出与住院死亡率之间的关联不受地区或医院规模的影响。
死亡率的未观察到的预测因素导致人们不确定更高的住院医院支出是否会导致更低的住院死亡率。
对于 6 种常见医疗状况,支出较高的医院的住院死亡率较低。