1 Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, Department of Medicine, National Jewish Health, Denver, Colorado.
2 Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2017 Jan;14(1):103-109. doi: 10.1513/AnnalsATS.201608-617OC.
In the United States, approximately 20% of patients hospitalized with pneumonia are readmitted to a hospital within 30 days. Given the significant costs and healthcare system use resulting from unplanned readmissions, pneumonia readmission rates are a target of national quality measures. Patient do-not-resuscitate (DNR) status strongly influences hospital pneumonia mortality measures; however, associations between DNR status and 30-day readmissions after pneumonia are unclear.
Determine the effect of accounting for patient DNR status on hospital readmission measures for pneumonia.
After excluding patients with missing data, those who died during the index hospitalization, those who were discharged against medical advice, those who did not reside in California, and those admitted to low pneumonia case-volume hospitals, we identified 30-day unplanned readmissions after an index pneumonia hospitalization from the 2011 California State Inpatient Database. We used hierarchical logistic regression to determine the association between early DNR status (within 24 hours of admission) and 30-day readmission and hospital risk-adjusted readmission rates.
We identified 68,691 hospitalizations for pneumonia across 321 hospitals. Patients with early DNR orders were less likely to be readmitted within 30 days (20.0% vs. 22.5%, adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 0.93; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.88-0.99). Patients with pneumonia admitted to high-versus-low DNR rate hospitals were at lower risk for readmission (DNR rate quartile 4 vs. quartile 1, aOR, 0.62; 95% CI, 0.55-0.70), regardless of individual DNR status. Higher hospital risk-adjusted DNR rates were strongly associated with lower risk-adjusted readmission rates (r = -0.44; P < 0.0001). Inclusion of early DNR status in risk-adjusted readmission models changed ranking categories for 7/321 (2.2%) hospitals, with 2 hospitals no longer labeled as "under-performing outliers."
Patients with an early DNR order have a lower risk for readmission after a pneumonia hospitalization. Unmeasured DNR status weakly confounds hospital readmission measures; accounting for patient DNR status would alter readmission ratings for a small number of hospitals.
在美国,约有 20%的肺炎住院患者在 30 天内再次住院。鉴于计划外再入院所导致的高昂成本和医疗系统使用,肺炎再入院率是国家质量措施的目标。患者的不复苏(DNR)状态强烈影响医院肺炎死亡率的衡量标准;然而,DNR 状态与肺炎后 30 天再入院之间的关系尚不清楚。
确定在肺炎住院患者死亡率的衡量标准中纳入患者 DNR 状态的效果。
排除数据缺失、住院期间死亡、未经医嘱出院、未居住在加利福尼亚州以及入住低肺炎病例量医院的患者后,我们从 2011 年加利福尼亚州住院患者数据库中确定了索引肺炎住院后 30 天内未计划的再入院情况。我们使用分层逻辑回归来确定早期 DNR 状态(入院后 24 小时内)与 30 天再入院和医院风险调整再入院率之间的关联。
我们在 321 家医院中识别出 68691 例肺炎住院患者。早期 DNR 医嘱患者在 30 天内再入院的可能性较低(20.0% vs. 22.5%,调整后的优势比[OR],0.93;95%置信区间[CI],0.88-0.99)。与 DNR 率低的医院相比,DNR 率高的肺炎患者再入院风险较低(DNR 率四分位距 4 与四分位距 1 相比,OR,0.62;95%CI,0.55-0.70),无论个体 DNR 状态如何。较高的医院风险调整 DNR 率与较低的风险调整再入院率密切相关(r= -0.44;P<0.0001)。在风险调整再入院模型中纳入早期 DNR 状态会改变 321 家医院中的 7/321(2.2%)医院的分类类别,其中有 2 家医院不再被标记为“表现不佳的异常值”。
肺炎住院后,早期 DNR 医嘱患者的再入院风险较低。未测量的 DNR 状态会对医院再入院率产生微弱影响;在衡量标准中纳入患者的 DNR 状态可能会改变少数医院的再入院率评价。