Hehir Mark P, Ananth Cande V, Wright Jason D, Siddiq Zainab, D'Alton Mary E, Friedman Alexander M
Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York Presbyterian Hospital, New York, NY.
Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York Presbyterian Hospital, New York, NY; Department of Epidemiology, Joseph L. Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, NY.
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2017 Feb;216(2):179.e1-179.e12. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2016.10.029. Epub 2016 Oct 24.
While research has demonstrated increasing risk for severe maternal morbidity in the United States, risk at lower volume hospitals remains poorly characterized. More than half of all obstetric units in the United States perform <1000 deliveries per year and improving care at these hospitals may be critical to reducing risk nationwide.
We sought to characterize maternal risk profiles and severe maternal morbidity at low-volume hospitals in the United States.
We used data from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample to evaluate trends in severe maternal morbidity and comorbid risk during delivery hospitalizations in the United States from 1998 through 2011. Comorbid maternal risk was estimated using a comorbidity index validated for obstetric patients. Severe maternal morbidity was defined as the presence of any 1 of 15 diagnoses representative of acute organ injury and critical illness.
A total of 2,300,279 deliveries occurred at hospitals with annual delivery volume <1000, representing 20% of delivery hospitalizations overall. There were 7849 cases (0.34%) of severe morbidity in low-volume hospitals and this risk increased over the course of the study from 0.25% in 1998 through 1999 to 0.49% in 2010 through 2011 (P < .01). The risk in hospitals with ≥1000 deliveries increased from 0.35-0.62% during the same time periods. The proportion of patients with the lowest comorbidity decreased, while the proportion of patients with highest comorbidity increased the most. The risk of severe morbidity increased across all women including those with low comorbidity scores. Risk for severe morbidity associated with obstetric hemorrhage, infection, hypertensive diseases of pregnancy, and medical conditions all increased during the study period.
Our findings demonstrate increasing maternal risk at hospitals performing <1000 deliveries per year broadly distributed over the patient population. Rates of morbidity in centers with ≥1000 deliveries have also increased. These findings suggest that maternal safety improvements are necessary at all centers regardless of volume.
尽管研究表明美国孕产妇严重发病的风险在增加,但低产量医院的风险特征仍不清楚。美国超过一半的产科单位每年分娩量不足1000例,改善这些医院的护理对于降低全国范围内的风险可能至关重要。
我们试图描述美国低产量医院的孕产妇风险概况和严重孕产妇发病率。
我们使用全国住院患者样本的数据来评估1998年至2011年美国分娩住院期间严重孕产妇发病率和合并症风险的趋势。使用经过产科患者验证的合并症指数估计孕产妇合并症风险。严重孕产妇发病率定义为存在代表急性器官损伤和危重病的15种诊断中的任何一种。
年分娩量不足1000例的医院共发生2300279例分娩,占分娩住院总数的20%。低产量医院有7849例(0.34%)严重发病病例,在研究过程中,这一风险从1998年至1999年的0.25%增加到2010年至2011年的0.49%(P <.01)。同期分娩量≥1000例的医院风险从0.35%增加到0.