Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, USA.
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, USA.
J Shoulder Elbow Surg. 2024 Nov;33(11):2421-2426. doi: 10.1016/j.jse.2024.01.038. Epub 2024 Mar 27.
Disparities in social determinants of health have been linked to worse patient reported outcomes, higher pain, and increased risk of revision surgery following rotator cuff repair. Identification of perioperative predictors of increased healthcare utilization is of particular interest to surgeons to improve outcomes and mitigate the total cost of care. The effect of social deprivation on healthcare utilization has not been fully characterized.
This is a retrospective review of a single institution's experience with primary rotator cuff repair between 2012 and 2020. Demographic variables (age, race, gender, American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score) and healthcare utilization (hospital readmission, emergency department visits, follow-up visits, telephone calls) were recorded within 90 days of surgery. The Area Deprivation Index (ADI) was recorded, and patients were separated into terciles according to their relative level of social deprivation. Outcomes were then stratified based on ADI tercile and compared.
A total of 1695 patients were included. The upper, middle, and lower terciles of ADI consisted of 410, 767, and 518 patients, respectively. The most deprived tercile had greater emergency department visitation and office visitation within 90 days of surgery relative to the least and intermediate deprived terciles. Higher levels of social deprivation were independent risk factors for increased emergency department (ED) visitation and follow-up visitation. There was no difference in 90-day readmission rates or telephone calls made between the least, intermediate, and most deprived patients.
Patients with higher levels of deprivation demonstrated greater postoperative hospital utilization. We hope to use these results to identify risk factors for increased hospital use, guide clinical decision making, increase transparency, and manage patient outcomes following rotator cuff repair surgery.
社会健康决定因素的差异与患者报告的结果较差、疼痛加剧以及肩袖修复术后翻修手术风险增加有关。确定围手术期增加医疗保健利用的预测因素对外科医生特别感兴趣,以改善结果并减轻护理总成本。社会贫困对医疗保健利用的影响尚未得到充分描述。
这是对 2012 年至 2020 年期间单一机构进行的原发性肩袖修复经验的回顾性研究。记录了人口统计学变量(年龄、种族、性别、美国麻醉医师协会(ASA)评分)和医疗保健利用(医院再入院、急诊就诊、随访就诊、电话咨询)在手术后 90 天内。记录了区域贫困指数(ADI),并根据相对社会贫困程度将患者分为三分之一。然后根据 ADI 三分位数对结果进行分层并进行比较。
共纳入 1695 例患者。ADI 的上、中、下三分之一分别包含 410、767 和 518 例患者。最贫困的三分之一在手术后 90 天内急诊就诊和就诊次数多于最不贫困和中等贫困的三分之一。较高的社会贫困程度是增加急诊就诊和随访就诊的独立危险因素。在最不贫困、中等贫困和最贫困患者之间,90 天内再入院率或电话咨询次数没有差异。
贫困程度较高的患者表现出更高的术后住院利用率。我们希望利用这些结果来确定增加医院使用的风险因素,指导临床决策,提高透明度,并管理肩袖修复手术后的患者结局。