Housley Blain Chaise, Stawicki Stanislaw P A, Evans David C, Jones Christian
The Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus, Ohio.
Division of Trauma, Critical Care and Burn, Department of Surgery, The Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus, Ohio.
J Surg Res. 2015 Nov;199(1):237-43. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2015.05.014. Epub 2015 May 15.
Hospital readmissions are considered to be a measure of quality of care, correlate with worse outcomes, and may soon lead to decreased reimbursement. The comorbidity-polypharmacy score (CPS) is the sum of the number of preinjury medications and comorbidities, and may estimate patient frailty more effectively than patient age. This study evaluates the association between CPS and readmission.
Medical records for trauma patients ≥45 y evaluated between January 1 and December 31, 2008, at our American College of Surgeons-verified level 1 trauma center were reviewed to obtain information on demographics, injuries, preinjury comorbidities, and medications, and occurrences of readmission to our facility within 30 d of discharge. Chi-square and Kruskal-Wallis testing was used to evaluate differences between readmitted and nonreadmitted patients, with multiple logistic regression used to evaluate the contribution of independent risk factors for readmission.
A total of 879 patients were included; their ages ranged from 45-103 y (median 58), injury severity scores from 0-50 y (median 5), and CPS from 0-39 y (median 7). A total of 76 patients (8.6%) were readmitted to our facility within 30 d of discharge. The readmitted cohort had higher CPS (median, 9.5, range 0-32, P = 0.031) and injury severity score (median, 9, range 1-38, P = 0.045), but no difference in age (median, 59.5, range 47-99, P = 0.646). Logistic regression demonstrated independent association of higher CPS with increased risk of readmission, with each CPS point increasing readmission likelihood by 3.5% (P = 0.03).
CPS appears to correlate well with readmissions within 30 d. Frailty defined by CPS was a significantly stronger predictor of readmission than was patient age. Early recognition of elevated CPS may improve discharge planning and help guide interventions to decrease readmission rates in older trauma patients.
医院再入院被视为医疗质量的一项衡量指标,与更差的预后相关,且可能很快导致报销费用减少。共病 - 多重用药评分(CPS)是受伤前用药数量和共病数量之和,与患者年龄相比,可能更有效地评估患者的虚弱程度。本研究评估CPS与再入院之间的关联。
回顾2008年1月1日至12月31日期间在我们经美国外科医师学会认证的一级创伤中心评估的年龄≥45岁创伤患者的病历,以获取人口统计学、损伤情况、受伤前共病情况、用药情况以及出院后30天内再次入住我们机构的情况等信息。采用卡方检验和Kruskal - Wallis检验评估再入院患者与未再入院患者之间的差异,使用多因素逻辑回归评估再入院独立危险因素的作用。
共纳入879例患者;年龄范围为45 - 103岁(中位数58岁),损伤严重程度评分范围为0 - 50分(中位数5分),CPS范围为0 - 39分(中位数7分)。共有76例患者(8.6%)在出院后30天内再次入住我们机构。再入院队列的CPS(中位数9.5,范围0 - 32,P = 0.031)和损伤严重程度评分(中位数9,范围1 - 38,P = 0.045)较高,但年龄无差异(中位数59.5,范围47 - 99,P = 0.646)。逻辑回归显示,较高的CPS与再入院风险增加独立相关,CPS每增加1分,再入院可能性增加3.5%(P = 0.03)。
CPS似乎与30天内的再入院情况密切相关。由CPS定义的虚弱比患者年龄更能显著预测再入院情况。早期识别升高的CPS可能改善出院计划,并有助于指导采取干预措施降低老年创伤患者的再入院率。