Department of General Practice and Rural Health, Dunedin School of Medicine, Otago Medical School, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand
Department of General Practice and Rural Health, Dunedin School of Medicine, Otago Medical School, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
BMJ Open. 2021 May 6;11(5):e046207. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-046207.
Little is known about differences in hospital harm (injury, suffering, disability, disease or death arising from hospital care) when people from rural and urban locations require hospital care. This study aimed to assess whether hospital harm risk differed by patients' rural or urban location using general practice data.
Secondary analysis of a 3-year retrospective cross-sectional general practice records review study, designed with equal numbers of rural and urban patients and patients from small, medium and large practices. Hospital admissions, interhospital transfer and hospital harm were identified.
New Zealand (NZ) general practice clinical records including hospital discharge data.
Randomly selected patient records from randomly selected general practices across NZ. Patient enrolment at rural and urban general practices defined patient location.
Admission and harm risk and rate ratios by rural-urban location were investigated using multivariable analyses adjusted for age, sex, ethnicity, deprivation, practice size. Preventable hospital harm, harm severity and harm associated with interhospital transfer were analysed.
Of 9076 patient records, 1561 patients (17%) experienced hospital admissions with no significant association between patient location and hospital admission (rural vs urban adjusted risk ratio (aRR) 0.98 (95% CI 0.83 to 1.17)). Of patients admitted to hospital, 172 (11%) experienced hospital harm. Rural location was not associated with increased hospital harm risk (aRR 1.01 (95% CI 0.97 to 1.05)) or rate of hospital harm per admission (adjusted incidence rate ratio 1.09 (95% CI 0.83 to 1.43)). Nearly half (45%) of hospital harms became apparent only after discharge. No urban patients required interhospital transfer, but 3% of rural patients did. Interhospital transfer was associated with over twice the risk of hospital harm (age-adjusted aRR 2.33 (95% CI 1.37 to 3.98), p=0.003).
Rural patient location was not associated with increased hospital harm. This provides reassurance for rural communities and health planners. The exception was patients needing interhospital transfer, where risk was more than doubled, warranting further research.
对于来自农村和城市地区的需要医院治疗的人群,人们对医院伤害(因医院护理而导致的伤害、痛苦、残疾、疾病或死亡)的差异知之甚少。本研究旨在使用全科医疗记录评估患者的农村或城市位置是否会导致医院伤害风险的差异。
这是一项为期 3 年的回顾性横断面全科医疗记录回顾研究的二次分析,研究设计了数量相等的农村和城市患者以及来自小型、中型和大型实践的患者。确定了住院、院内转院和医院伤害。
新西兰(NZ)全科医疗临床记录,包括医院出院数据。
来自 NZ 随机选择的全科医疗实践的随机患者记录。农村和城市全科医疗实践的患者入学定义了患者的位置。
在 9076 名患者记录中,有 1561 名患者(17%)经历了住院治疗,患者位置与住院治疗之间没有显著关联(农村与城市调整后的风险比(aRR)为 0.98(95%CI 0.83 至 1.17))。在住院的患者中,有 172 名(11%)经历了医院伤害。农村地区与增加的医院伤害风险无关(aRR 1.01(95%CI 0.97 至 1.05))或每入院的医院伤害发生率(调整后的发病率比 1.09(95%CI 0.83 至 1.43))。近一半(45%)的医院伤害只有在出院后才显现出来。没有城市患者需要院内转院,但 3%的农村患者需要。院内转院与医院伤害风险增加两倍以上相关(年龄调整后的 aRR 2.33(95%CI 1.37 至 3.98),p=0.003)。
农村患者的位置与增加的医院伤害无关。这为农村社区和卫生规划者提供了保证。例外的是需要院内转院的患者,他们的风险增加了一倍以上,需要进一步研究。