Department of Health Professions, Hofstra University, 262 Swim Center, 220 Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY, 11549-2200, USA.
Department of Data Analytics, Alliance for Positive Change, 64 West 35th Street, New York, NY, 10001, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2020 Feb 10;20(1):100. doi: 10.1186/s12913-020-4896-1.
Length of hospital stay (LOS) for hip fracture treatments is associated with mortality. In addition to patient demographic and clinical factors, hospital and payer type may also influence LOS, and thus mortality, among hip fracture patients; accordingly, outcome disparities between groups may arise from where patients are treated and from their health insurance type. The purpose of this study was to examine if where hip fracture patients are treated and how they pay for their care is associated with outcome disparities between patient groups. Specifically, we examined whether LOS differed between patients treated at safety-net and non-safety-net hospitals and whether LOS was associated with patients' insurance type within each hospital category.
A sample of 48,948 hip fracture patients was extracted from New York State's Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System (SPARCS), 2014-2016. Using means comparison and X tests, differences between safety-net and non-safety-net hospitals on LOS and patient characteristics were examined. Relationships between LOS and hospital category (safety-net or non-safety-net) and LOS and insurance type were further evaluated through negative binomial regression models.
LOS was statistically (p ≤ 0.001) longer in safety-net hospitals (7.37 days) relative to non-safety-net hospitals (6.34 days). Treatment in a safety-net hospital was associated with a LOS that was 11.7% (p = 0.003) longer than in a non-safety-net hospital. Having Medicaid was associated with a longer LOS relative to having commercial health insurance.
Where hip fracture patients are treated is associated with LOS and may influence outcome disparities between groups. Future research should examine whether outcome differences between safety-net and non-safety-net hospitals are associated with resource availability and hospital payer mix.
髋部骨折治疗的住院时间(LOS)与死亡率有关。除了患者的人口统计学和临床因素外,医院和支付者类型也可能影响髋部骨折患者的 LOS,从而影响死亡率;因此,不同群体之间的结果差异可能源于患者接受治疗的地点和他们的健康保险类型。本研究的目的是检查髋部骨折患者接受治疗的地点以及他们如何支付治疗费用是否与患者群体之间的结果差异有关。具体而言,我们检查了在安全网医院和非安全网医院接受治疗的患者之间的 LOS 是否存在差异,以及在每个医院类别中,LOS 是否与患者的保险类型有关。
从纽约州全州规划和研究合作系统(SPARCS)中提取了 48948 例髋部骨折患者的样本,时间为 2014 年至 2016 年。使用均值比较和 X 检验,检查 LOS 和患者特征在安全网医院和非安全网医院之间的差异。通过负二项回归模型进一步评估 LOS 与医院类别(安全网或非安全网)和 LOS 与保险类型之间的关系。
安全网医院的 LOS 明显(p≤0.001)长于非安全网医院(7.37 天)(6.34 天)。在安全网医院接受治疗的患者的 LOS 比在非安全网医院长 11.7%(p=0.003)。与商业健康保险相比,拥有医疗补助的患者的 LOS 更长。
髋部骨折患者接受治疗的地点与 LOS 有关,并可能影响不同群体之间的结果差异。未来的研究应检查安全网医院和非安全网医院之间的结果差异是否与资源可用性和医院支付者组合有关。