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医院的产妇特征与足月新生儿意外并发症的发生率

Maternal Characteristics and Rates of Unexpected Complications in Term Newborns by Hospital.

机构信息

Department of Population Health Science and Policy, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York.

Raquel and Jaime Gilinski Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Science, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York.

出版信息

JAMA Netw Open. 2024 May 1;7(5):e2411699. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.11699.

Abstract

IMPORTANCE

The Joint Commission Unexpected Complications in Term Newborns measure characterizes newborn morbidity potentially associated with quality of labor and delivery care. Infant exclusions isolate relatively low-risk births, but unexpected newborn complications (UNCs) are not adjusted for maternal factors that may be associated with outcomes independently of hospital quality.

OBJECTIVE

To investigate the association between maternal characteristics and hospital UNC rates.

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cohort study was conducted using linked 2016 to 2018 New York City birth and hospital discharge datasets among 254 259 neonates at low risk (singleton, ≥37 weeks, birthweight ≥2500 g, and without preexisting fetal conditions) at 39 hospitals. Logistic regression was used to calculate unadjusted hospital-specific UNC rates and replicated analyses adjusting for maternal covariates. Hospitals were categorized into UNC quintiles; changes in quintile ranking with maternal adjustment were examined. Data analyses were performed from December 2022 to July 2023.

MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES

UNCs were classified according to Joint Commission International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) criteria. Maternal preadmission comorbidities, obstetric factors, social characteristics, and hospital characteristics were ascertained.

RESULTS

Among 254 259 singleton births at 37 weeks or later who were at low risk (125 245 female [49.3%] and 129 014 male [50.7%]; 71 768 births [28.2%] to Hispanic, 47 226 births [18.7%] to non-Hispanic Asian, 42 682 births [16.8%] to non-Hispanic Black, and 89 845 births [35.3%] to non-Hispanic White mothers and 2738 births [1.0%] to mothers with another race or ethnicity), 148 393 births (58.4%) were covered by Medicaid and 101 633 births (40.0%) were covered by commercial insurance. The 2016 to 2018 cumulative UNC incidence in New York City hospitals was 37.1 UNCs per 1000 births. Infants of mothers with preadmission risk factors had increased UNC risk; for example, among mothers with vs without preeclampsia, there were 104.4 and 35.8 UNCs per 1000 births, respectively. Among hospitals, unadjusted UNC rates ranged from 15.6 to 215.5 UNCs per 1000 births and adjusted UNC rates ranged from 15.6 to 194.0 UNCs per 1000 births (median [IQR] change from adjustment, 1.4 [-4.7 to 1.0] UNCs/1000 births). The median (IQR) change per 1000 births for adjusted vs unadjusted rates showed that hospitals with low (<601 deliveries/year; -2.8 [-7.0 to -1.6] UNCs) to medium (601 to <954 deliveries/year; -3.9 [-7.1 to -1.9] UNCs) delivery volume, public ownership (-3.6 [-6.2 to -2.3] UNCs), or high proportions of Medicaid-insured (eg, ≥90.72%; -3.7 [-5.3 to -1.9] UNCs), Black (eg, ≥32.83%; -5.3 [-9.1 to -2.2] UNCs), or Hispanic (eg, ≥6.25%; -3.7 [-5.3 to -1.9] UNCs) patients had significantly decreased UNC rates after adjustment, while rates increased or did not change in hospitals with the highest delivery volume, private ownership, or births to predominantly White or privately insured individuals. Among all 39 hospitals, 7 hospitals (17.9%) shifted 1 quintile comparing risk-adjusted with unadjusted quintile rankings.

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE

In this study, adjustment for maternal case mix was associated with small overall changes in hospital UNC rates. These changes were associated with performance assessment for some hospitals, and these results suggest that profiling on this measure should consider the implications of small changes in rates for hospitals with higher-risk obstetric populations.

摘要

重要性

联合委员会意外并发症在足月新生儿中的衡量标准,描述了可能与分娩和护理质量相关的新生儿发病率。新生儿排除标准将相对低风险的分娩隔离出来,但意外新生儿并发症(UNCs)并未根据可能与医院质量无关的产妇因素进行调整。

目的

研究产妇特征与医院 UNC 发生率之间的关系。

设计、地点和参与者:这项队列研究使用了 2016 年至 2018 年纽约市的 254259 名低风险(单胎、≥37 周、出生体重≥2500g,且无胎儿先存疾病)新生儿的出生和医院出院数据集进行,这些新生儿在 39 家医院中进行。使用逻辑回归计算未经调整的医院特异性 UNC 发生率,并复制了调整产妇协变量的分析。将医院分为 UNC 五分位数;通过产妇调整,检查五分位数排名的变化。数据分析于 2023 年 12 月至 7 月进行。

主要结果和措施

根据国际疾病分类第十版(ICD-10)标准对 UNC 进行分类。确定了产妇入院前合并症、产科因素、社会特征和医院特征。

结果

在 254259 名 37 周或以上的单胎分娩中,低风险(125245 名女性[49.3%]和 129014 名男性[50.7%];71768 例分娩[28.2%]为西班牙裔,47226 例分娩[18.7%]为非西班牙裔亚裔,42682 例分娩[16.8%]为非西班牙裔黑人,89845 例分娩[35.3%]为非西班牙裔白人母亲和 2738 例分娩[1.0%]为母亲其他种族或民族)中,148393 例(58.4%)由医疗补助计划覆盖,101633 例(40.0%)由商业保险覆盖。纽约市医院的 2016 年至 2018 年累积 UNC 发生率为每 1000 例活产 37.1 例 UNC。有入院前危险因素的产妇的 UNC 风险增加;例如,与无先兆子痫的产妇相比,分别有 104.4 和 35.8 例 UNC/1000 例活产。在医院方面,未经调整的 UNC 率范围为每 1000 例活产 15.6 至 215.5 UNC,调整后的 UNC 率范围为每 1000 例活产 15.6 至 194.0 UNC(调整后中位数[IQR]变化为 1.4 [4.7 至 1.0] UNC/1000 例活产)。与未经调整的比率相比,调整后的每 1000 例活产的中位数(IQR)变化表明,低(<601 次分娩/年;-2.8 [-7.0 至-1.6] UNC/1000 例活产)至中等(601 至<954 次分娩/年;-3.9 [-7.1 至-1.9] UNC/1000 例活产)分娩量、公有制(-3.6 [-6.2 至-2.3] UNC/1000 例活产)或高比例医疗补助保险(例如,≥90.72%;-3.7 [-5.3 至-1.9] UNC/1000 例活产)的医院、高黑人(例如,≥32.83%;-5.3 [-9.1 至-2.2] UNC/1000 例活产)或高西班牙裔(例如,≥6.25%;-3.7 [-5.3 至-1.9] UNC/1000 例活产)产妇的 UNC 率显著降低,而分娩量最高、私有制或以白人或私人保险为主的医院的 UNC 率增加或不变。在所有 39 家医院中,有 7 家医院(17.9%)在风险调整后与未经调整的五分位数排名相比,排名上升或下降了 1 个五分位数。

结论和相关性

在这项研究中,产妇病例组合的调整与医院 UNC 率的总体变化较小有关。这些变化与一些医院的绩效评估有关,这些结果表明,对该指标的分析应考虑到高危产科人群医院的率变化对医院的影响。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/a80f/11107302/daaee641c771/jamanetwopen-e2411699-g001.jpg

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