Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Cardiology Division, Department of Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine, 660 S Euclid Ave, St. Louis, MO, 63110, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2023 Apr;38(5):1232-1238. doi: 10.1007/s11606-022-08002-5. Epub 2023 Jan 17.
The COVID-19 pandemic caused massive disruption in usual care delivery patterns in hospitals across the USA, and highlighted long-standing inequities in health care delivery and outcomes. Its effect on hospital operations, and whether the magnitude of the effect differed for hospitals serving historically marginalized populations, is unknown.
To investigate the perspectives of hospital leaders on the effects of COVID-19 on their facilities' operations and patient outcomes.
A survey was administered via print and electronic means to hospital leaders at 588 randomly sampled acute-care hospitals participating in Medicare's Inpatient Prospective Payment System, fielded from November 2020 to June 2021. Summary statistics were tabulated, and responses were adjusted for sampling strategy and non-response.
There were 203 responses to the survey (41.6%), with 20.7% of respondents representing safety-net hospitals and 19.7% representing high-minority hospitals. Over three-quarters of hospitals reported COVID testing shortages, about two-thirds reported staffing shortages, and 78.8% repurposed hospital spaces to intensive care units, with a slightly higher proportion of high-minority hospitals reporting these effects. About half of respondents felt that non-COVID inpatients received worsened quality or outcomes during peak COVID surges, and almost two-thirds reported worsened quality or outcomes for outpatient non-COVID patients as well, with few differences by hospital safety-net or minority status. Over 80% of hospitals participated in alternative payment models prior to COVID, and a third of these reported decreasing these efforts due to the pandemic, with no differences between safety-net and high-minority hospitals.
COVID-19 significantly disrupted the operations of hospitals across the USA, with hospitals serving patients in poverty and racial and ethnic minorities reporting relatively similar care disruption as non-safety-net and lower-minority hospitals.
COVID-19 大流行导致美国各地医院的常规护理模式发生了巨大变化,并凸显了医疗保健提供和结果方面长期存在的不平等。其对医院运营的影响,以及对服务于历史上处于边缘地位人群的医院的影响程度是否不同,尚不清楚。
调查医院领导对 COVID-19 对其设施运营和患者结果的影响的看法。
通过纸质和电子方式向参与联邦医疗保险住院患者预付款制度的 588 家随机抽样的急症护理医院的医院领导发放调查问卷,调查于 2020 年 11 月至 2021 年 6 月进行。汇总了描述性统计数据,并对抽样策略和无应答进行了调整。
共有 203 份调查回复(41.6%),其中 20.7%的受访者代表安全网医院,19.7%代表少数民族占比较高的医院。超过四分之三的医院报告 COVID 检测短缺,约三分之二的医院报告人员短缺,78.8%将医院空间改用于重症监护病房,少数民族占比较高的医院报告这些影响的比例略高。大约一半的受访者认为非 COVID 住院患者在 COVID 高峰期的质量或结果恶化,近三分之二的受访者报告非 COVID 门诊患者的质量或结果也恶化,而医院安全网或少数民族地位方面差异不大。在 COVID 之前,超过 80%的医院参与了替代支付模式,其中三分之一的医院报告由于疫情减少了这些努力,安全网医院和少数民族占比较高的医院之间没有差异。
COVID-19 严重扰乱了美国各地医院的运营,服务于贫困和种族及少数民族患者的医院与非安全网和少数民族比例较低的医院报告的护理中断情况大致相似。