Department of Emergency Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY; Department of Population Health Science and Policy, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY.
Ann Emerg Med. 2018 May;71(5):555-563.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2017.08.023. Epub 2017 Sep 28.
Analyses of 72-hour emergency department (ED) return visits are frequently used for quality assurance purposes and have been proposed as a means of measuring provider performance. These analyses have traditionally examined only patients returning to the same hospital as the initial visit. We use a health information exchange network to describe differences between ED visits resulting in 72-hour revisits to the same hospital and those resulting in revisits to a different site.
We examined data from a 31-hospital health information exchange of all ED visits during a 5-year period to identify 72-hour return visits and collected available encounter, patient, and hospital variables. Next, we used multilevel analysis of encounter-level, patient-level, and hospital-level data to describe differences between initial ED visits resulting in different-site and same-site return visits.
We identified 12,621,159 patient visits to the 31 study EDs, including 841,259 same-site and 107,713 different-site return visits within 72 hours of initial ED presentation. We calculated odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for the initial-visit characteristics' predictive relationship that any return visit would be at a different site: daytime visit (OR 1.10; 95% CI 1.07 to 1.12), patient-hospital county concordance (OR 1.40; 95% CI 1.36 to 1.44), male sex (OR 1.27; 95% CI 1.24 to 1.30), aged 65 years or older (OR 0.55; 95% CI 0.53 to 0.57), sites with an ED residency (OR 0.41; 95% CI 0.40 to 0.43), sites at an academic hospital (OR 1.12; 95% CI 1.08 to 1.15), sites with high density of surrounding EDs (OR 1.73; 95% CI 1.68 to 1.77), and sites with a high frequency of same-site return visits (OR 0.10; 95% CI 0.10 to 0.11).
This analysis describes how ED encounters with early revisits to the same hospital differ from those with revisits to a second hospital. These findings challenge the use of single-site return-visit frequency as a quality measure, and, more constructively, describe how hospitals can use health information exchange to more accurately identify early ED return visits and to support programs related to these revisits.
分析 72 小时急诊科(ED)复诊是质量保证的常用方法,并被提出作为衡量医疗服务提供者绩效的一种手段。这些分析通常只检查返回初始就诊医院的患者。我们利用健康信息交换网络来描述导致 72 小时内返回同一医院和返回不同医院的 ED 就诊之间的差异。
我们对 5 年期间 31 家医院健康信息交换的所有 ED 就诊数据进行了研究,以确定 72 小时内复诊的患者,并收集了可用的就诊、患者和医院变量。然后,我们使用多水平分析就诊水平、患者水平和医院水平的数据,以描述导致不同医院和同一医院返回的初始 ED 就诊之间的差异。
我们在 31 家研究 ED 中确定了 12621159 例患者就诊,其中 841259 例为同一医院复诊,107713 例为 72 小时内返回不同医院的复诊。我们计算了任何复诊都在不同医院的初始就诊特征的预测关系的优势比(OR)和 95%置信区间(CI):日间就诊(OR 1.10;95%CI 1.07 至 1.12)、患者-医院县匹配(OR 1.40;95%CI 1.36 至 1.44)、男性(OR 1.27;95%CI 1.24 至 1.30)、年龄 65 岁或以上(OR 0.55;95%CI 0.53 至 0.57)、有 ED 住院医师的医院(OR 0.41;95%CI 0.40 至 0.43)、学术医院(OR 1.12;95%CI 1.08 至 1.15)、周围 ED 密度高的医院(OR 1.73;95%CI 1.68 至 1.77)和复诊频率高的医院(OR 0.10;95%CI 0.10 至 0.11)。
本分析描述了早期返回同一医院的 ED 就诊与返回第二家医院的就诊之间的差异。这些发现对使用单一医院复诊频率作为质量衡量标准提出了挑战,更具建设性的是,描述了医院如何利用健康信息交换更准确地识别早期 ED 复诊,并支持与这些复诊相关的计划。