Horn Christopher B, O'Malley Joseph F, Carey Evan P, Culhane John T
Trauma/Critical Care, University of Cincinnati Medical Center, Cincinnati, USA.
General Surgery, Saint Louis University School of Medicine, St. Louis, USA.
Cureus. 2022 Apr 7;14(4):e23908. doi: 10.7759/cureus.23908. eCollection 2022 Apr.
Hospital-acquired conditions (HACs) are increasingly scrutinized as markers of hospital quality and are subject to increasing regulatory and financial pressure. Despite this, there is little evidence that HACs are associated with poor outcomes in traumatically injured patients, or that lower HAC rates are a marker of a better quality of care. Our study compares mortality rates in hospitals with high versus low rates of HAC. Our hypothesis is that high HAC trauma centers have higher mortality.
The latest editions of the National Trauma Data Bank (NTDB) containing facility identification keys (2011 to 2015) were combined. The HACs targeted by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Hospital-Acquired Condition Reduction Program (HACRP) were identified. Hospital-acquired conditions per 1000 patient-days were calculated for individual trauma centers, and these facilities were stratified into quartiles by HAC rate. Propensity score matching was used to match patients admitted to hospitals in the highest versus the lowest quartiles.
Complete data was available for 3,510,818 patients; 58,296 (1.67%) developed HACs recorded in the NTDB. Good performing centers had a mean of 0.84 HACs per 1000 patient-days compared to 7.82 at poor-performing centers. After propensity matching, patients treated at good performing centers had higher mortality of 1.22% versus 1.02% at poor-performing centers (p<0.001). The facility characteristics most over-represented in the poor performing quartile were: University (45.19% vs 10.59%, p<0.001), American College of Surgeons (ACS) Level I Status (31.85% vs 2.24%, p<0.001), and bed size > 600 (28.15% vs 5.5%, p<0.001).
Injured patients treated at poor-performing centers (high HAC) have reduced mortality relative to good performing centers (low HAC). Large academic centers were overwhelmingly represented in the poor-performing quartile. Hospital-acquired conditions may be markers of a non-modifiable underlying patient and facility characteristics rather than markers of poor hospital quality.
医院获得性疾病(HACs)作为医院质量的指标受到越来越多的审视,并面临着越来越大的监管和财务压力。尽管如此,几乎没有证据表明HACs与创伤患者的不良预后相关,或者较低的HAC发生率是更好医疗质量的标志。我们的研究比较了HAC发生率高的医院和低的医院的死亡率。我们的假设是,HAC发生率高的创伤中心死亡率更高。
合并包含机构识别码的最新版国家创伤数据库(NTDB,2011年至2015年)。确定医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心(CMS)医院获得性疾病降低计划(HACRP)所针对的HACs。计算各个创伤中心每1000个患者日的医院获得性疾病发生率,并根据HAC发生率将这些机构分为四分位数。使用倾向评分匹配法对最高四分位数和最低四分位数的医院收治的患者进行匹配。
共有3510818例患者的完整数据;58296例(1.67%)发生了NTDB记录的HACs。表现良好的中心每1000个患者日的HACs平均为0.84例,而表现不佳的中心为7.82例。倾向匹配后,在表现良好的中心接受治疗的患者死亡率较高,为1.22%,而在表现不佳的中心为1.02%(p<0.001)。在表现不佳的四分位数中占比过高的机构特征为:大学(45.19%对10.59%,p<0.001)、美国外科医师学会(ACS)一级地位(31.85%对2.24%,p<0.001)和床位规模>600(28.15%对5.5%,p<0.001)。
在表现不佳的中心(HAC发生率高)接受治疗的受伤患者相对于表现良好的中心(HAC发生率低)死亡率更低。大型学术中心在表现不佳的四分位数中占绝大多数。医院获得性疾病可能是不可改变的潜在患者和机构特征的标志,而非医院质量差的标志。