Jolles Diana R
J Midwifery Womens Health. 2017 Jan;62(1):49-57. doi: 10.1111/jmwh.12565.
Unwarranted variations in care are defined as differences in utilization of health care resources that cannot be explained by patient risk factors, standards of evidence-based medicine, or patient preferences. Also known as nonmedical determinants of variation, differences in health care utilization across the United States have been well documented in the literature during the past 40 years. The purpose of the literature review is to summarize the state of the science related to the nonmedical determinants of variation in cesarean birth among low-risk childbearing women, defined within national quality standards as nulliparous women with term, singleton pregnancies in the vertex presentation.
A literature search was performed using the electronic databases PubMed, CINAHL, Ovid MEDLINE, Google Scholar, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, and ProQuest Dissertation Database. Articles published in English, with full text available, including birth in the United States after 1995, are included in the analysis. Nine studies met criteria for inclusion. Forty-four states are represented within the data, with Arizona, California, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and New York being the subject of more than one of the publications analyzed.
This literature review includes more than one million births, in at least 44 states between 1996 through 2009, revealing significant unwarranted variation in cesarean birth. Nonmedical determinants of variation, such as access to resources, hospital characteristics, payer source, and provider practice styles, are identified as independent predictors of increased cesarean utilization in more than half of the studies reviewed. In all studies reviewed, women of low medical risk demonstrate susceptibility to unwarranted variation in the use of cesarean birth.
Continued emphasis on the specific needs of low-risk childbearing women is necessary to decrease unwarranted variation in the use of cesarean birth in the United States. Specific attention to the costs of unwarranted variation in cesarean birth is imperative.
不必要的医疗差异被定义为医疗资源利用上的差异,这些差异无法通过患者风险因素、循证医学标准或患者偏好来解释。在美国,医疗服务利用的差异也被称为变异的非医学决定因素,在过去40年的文献中已有充分记载。本综述的目的是总结与低风险生育妇女剖宫产变异的非医学决定因素相关的科学现状,在国家质量标准中,低风险生育妇女被定义为初产妇,足月单胎妊娠,头先露。
使用电子数据库PubMed、CINAHL、Ovid MEDLINE、谷歌学术、Cochrane系统评价数据库和ProQuest学位论文数据库进行文献检索。分析纳入以英文发表、有全文且包括1995年后在美国出生情况的文章。有9项研究符合纳入标准。数据涵盖44个州,其中亚利桑那州、加利福尼亚州、马萨诸塞州、新泽西州和纽约州是多篇分析出版物的主题。
本综述涵盖了1996年至2009年期间至少44个州的100多万例分娩,揭示了剖宫产存在显著且不必要的差异。变异的非医学决定因素,如资源可及性、医院特征、支付方来源和医疗服务提供者的执业方式,在超过一半的综述研究中被确定为剖宫产使用率增加的独立预测因素。在所有综述研究中,低医疗风险的女性在剖宫产使用上也容易出现不必要的差异。
持续关注低风险生育妇女的特殊需求对于减少美国剖宫产使用中不必要的差异至关重要。必须特别关注剖宫产不必要差异带来的成本。