Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA.
Department of Critical Care Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA.
Surgery. 2021 Nov;170(5):1298-1307. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2021.05.021. Epub 2021 Jun 17.
Emergency general surgery conditions are common, require urgent surgical evaluation, and are associated with high mortality and costs. Although appropriate interhospital transfers are critical to successful emergency general surgery care, the performance of emergency general surgery transfer systems remains unclear. We aimed to describe emergency general surgery transfer patterns and identify factors associated with potentially avoidable transfers.
We performed a retrospective cohort study of emergency general surgery episodes in 8 US states using the 2016 Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project State Inpatient and Emergency Department Databases and the American Hospital Association Annual Surveys. We identified Emergency Department-to-Inpatient and Inpatient-to-Inpatient interhospital emergency general surgery transfers. Potentially avoidable transfers were defined as discharge within 72 hours after transfer without undergoing any procedure or operation at the destination hospital. We examined transfer incidence and characteristics. We performed multilevel regression examining patient-level and hospital-level factors associated with potentially avoidable transfers.
Of 514,410 adult emergency general surgery episodes, 26,281 (5.1%) involved interhospital transfers (Emergency Department-to-Inpatient: 65.0%, Inpatient-to-Inpatient: 35.1%). Over 1 in 4 transfers were potentially avoidable (7,188, 27.4%), with the majority occurring from the emergency department. Factors associated with increased odds of potentially avoidable transfers included self-pay (versus government insurance, odds ratio: 1.26, 95% confidence interval: 1.09-1.45, P = .002), level 1 trauma centers (versus non-trauma centers, odds ratio: 1.24, 95% confidence interval: 1.05-1.47, P = .01), and critical access hospitals (versus non-critical access, odds ratio: 1.30, 95% confidence interval: 1.15-1.47, P < .001). Hospital-level factors (size, trauma center, ownership, critical access, location) accounted for 36.1% of potentially avoidable transfers variability.
Over 1 in 4 emergency general surgery transfers are potentially avoidable. Understanding factors associated with potentially avoidable transfers can guide research, quality improvement, and infrastructure development to optimize emergency general surgery care.
紧急普通外科情况很常见,需要紧急外科评估,且与高死亡率和高成本相关。尽管适当的医院间转院对成功的紧急普通外科护理至关重要,但紧急普通外科转院系统的性能仍不清楚。我们旨在描述紧急普通外科转院模式,并确定与潜在可避免转院相关的因素。
我们使用 2016 年医疗保健成本和利用项目州住院和急诊数据库以及美国医院协会年度调查,对 8 个美国州的紧急普通外科发作进行了回顾性队列研究。我们确定了急诊和住院间的紧急普通外科转院。潜在可避免的转院定义为在转院后 72 小时内出院,而在目的地医院未进行任何手术或操作。我们检查了转院发生率和特征。我们进行了多水平回归分析,以检查与潜在可避免转院相关的患者和医院水平因素。
在 514410 例成年紧急普通外科发作中,有 26281 例(5.1%)涉及医院间转院(急诊至住院:65.0%,住院至住院:35.1%)。超过四分之一的转院是潜在可避免的(7188 例,27.4%),其中大多数发生在急诊室。与潜在可避免转院相关的因素包括自付费(而非政府保险,优势比:1.26,95%置信区间:1.09-1.45,P=0.002)、1 级创伤中心(而非非创伤中心,优势比:1.24,95%置信区间:1.05-1.47,P=0.01)和基层医疗服务医院(而非非基层医疗服务医院,优势比:1.30,95%置信区间:1.15-1.47,P<.001)。医院水平因素(规模、创伤中心、所有权、基层医疗服务、地理位置)解释了潜在可避免转院变异的 36.1%。
超过四分之一的紧急普通外科转院是潜在可避免的。了解与潜在可避免转院相关的因素可以指导研究、质量改进和基础设施发展,以优化紧急普通外科护理。