Division of Public Health Sciences, Department of Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri; Department of Health Services Administration and Policy, College of Public Health, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Bariatric Surgery Program, Temple University Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Surg Obes Relat Dis. 2022 Feb;18(2):271-280. doi: 10.1016/j.soard.2021.10.007. Epub 2021 Oct 15.
Insurance-mandated precertification requirements are barriers to bariatric surgery. The value of their prescription, based on insurance type rather that the clinical necessity, is unclear.
To determine whether there is an association between insurance-mandated precertification criteria for bariatric surgery and short-term inpatient healthcare utilization.
Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council's inpatient care databases for the years 2016-2017.
The study included 2717 adults who underwent bariatric surgery in Southeastern Pennsylvania in 2016. Postoperative length of stay and rehospitalizations for these individuals were followed using clinical and claims data during the first year after bariatric surgery.
The requirements for 3- to 6-month preoperative medical weight management, as well as pulmonology and cardiology examinations, were not associated with the patient length of stay, number of all-cause rehospitalizations, or number of all-cause rehospitalization days after adjusting for patient age, sex, race, ethnicity, the Elixhauser comorbidity score, type of the surgery, facility where the surgery was performed, primary payer type, and the estimated median household income. Among commercially insured individuals (n = 1499), the mean number of all-cause rehospitalizations during the study period was lower in patients with no medical weight management requirement by a factor of .57 (lower by 43.1%; 95% confidence interval, .35-.94, P = .03) and higher in patients with no requirement for preoperative cardiology and pulmonology evaluations by a factor of 2.09 (95% confidence interval 1.09-4.02, P = .03).
The findings suggest that the precertification requirement for preoperative medical weight management is not associated with a reduction in inpatient healthcare utilization in the first postoperative year.
保险规定的术前认证要求是减重手术的障碍。这些要求的价值(基于保险类型而非临床必要性)尚不清楚。
确定减重手术的保险规定术前认证标准与短期住院医疗利用率之间是否存在关联。
宾夕法尼亚州医疗保健费用控制委员会 2016-2017 年的住院护理数据库。
本研究纳入了 2016 年在宾夕法尼亚州东南部接受减重手术的 2717 名成年人。使用临床和索赔数据,在减重手术后的第一年,对这些患者的术后住院时间和再入院情况进行随访。
术前 3-6 个月的医学体重管理要求,以及肺病学和心脏病学检查要求,与患者住院时间、全因再入院次数或全因再入院天数无关,在调整了患者年龄、性别、种族、民族、Elixhauser 合并症评分、手术类型、手术实施机构、主要支付类型和估计的中位数家庭收入后。在商业保险患者中(n=1499),在研究期间,无医学体重管理要求的患者全因再入院次数平均减少 0.57 倍(减少 43.1%;95%置信区间,0.35-0.94,P=0.03),而无术前心脏病学和肺病学评估要求的患者全因再入院次数增加 2.09 倍(95%置信区间 1.09-4.02,P=0.03)。
这些发现表明,术前医学体重管理的术前认证要求与术后第一年住院医疗利用率的降低无关。