Department of Communicable Disease, East Java Provincial Health Office, Surabaya, Indonesia.
Department of Epidemiology, Faculty of Medicine, Prince of Songkla University, Hat Yai, Thailand.
PLoS One. 2024 Sep 11;19(9):e0310090. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0310090. eCollection 2024.
This study aims to compare the trends in the quality of hospital care for WHO's three disease groups pre-, during, and post-COVID-19 pandemic peak in Thailand.
The study utilized existing hospital admission data from the Thai Health Information Portal (THIP) database, covering the period from 2017 to 2022. We categorized WHO's three disease groups: poverty-related, noncommunicable, and injury groups using the International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-10 of initial admission of patients, and we analyzed three major outcomes: prolonged (≥ 90th percentile) length of stay (LOS), hospital mortality, and readmission pre-, during, and post-COVID-19 pandemic peak. Relative weight (RW) of hospital reimbursements was used as a surrogate measure of the severity of the diseases.
The average prolonged LOS of patients with poverty disease pre-, during, and post-COVID-19 pandemic peak were 7.1%, 10.8%, 9.05%, respectively. Respective hospital mortality rates were 5.02%, 6.22%, 6.05% and readmission were 6.98/1,000, 6.16/1,000, 5.43/1,000, respectively. For non-communicable diseases, the respective proportions in the prolonged LOS were 9.0%, 9.12%, and 7.58%, with respective hospital mortality being 10.65%, 8.86%, 6.62%, and readmissions were 17.79/1,000, 13.94/1,000, 13.19/1,000, respectively. The respective prolonged LOS for injuries were 8.75%, 8.55%, 8.25%. Meanwhile, respective hospital mortality were 4.95%, 4.05%, 3.20%, and readmissions were 1.99/1,000, 1.60/1,000, 1.48/1,000, respectively. The RW analysis reveals diverse impacts on resource utilization and costs. Most poverty-related and noncommunicable diseases indicate increased resource requirements and associated costs, except for HIV/AIDS and diabetes mellitus, showing mixed trends. In injuries, road traffic accidents consistently decrease resource needs and costs, but suicide cases show mixed trends.
COVID-19 had a more serious impact, especially prolonged LOS and hospital mortality for poverty-related diseases more than noncommunicable diseases and injuries.
本研究旨在比较泰国在 COVID-19 大流行高峰期前后,世界卫生组织(WHO)三组疾病(贫困相关疾病、非传染性疾病和伤害)的医院护理质量趋势。
本研究利用泰国健康信息门户(THIP)数据库中的现有住院数据,涵盖 2017 年至 2022 年期间。我们使用患者入院时的国际疾病分类(ICD-10)将 WHO 的三组疾病进行分类:贫困相关疾病、非传染性疾病和伤害组。我们分析了三个主要结局:延长(≥第 90 个百分位数)住院时间(LOS)、医院死亡率和 COVID-19 大流行高峰期前后的再入院。医院报销的相对权重(RW)被用作疾病严重程度的替代衡量指标。
COVID-19 大流行高峰期前后,贫困相关疾病患者的平均延长 LOS 分别为 7.1%、10.8%、9.05%。相应的医院死亡率分别为 5.02%、6.22%、6.05%,再入院率分别为 6.98/1000、6.16/1000、5.43/1000。对于非传染性疾病,延长 LOS 的比例分别为 9.0%、9.12%和 7.58%,相应的医院死亡率分别为 10.65%、8.86%、6.62%,再入院率分别为 17.79/1000、13.94/1000、13.19/1000。伤害的延长 LOS 比例分别为 8.75%、8.55%、8.25%。同时,相应的医院死亡率分别为 4.95%、4.05%、3.20%,再入院率分别为 1.99/1000、1.60/1000、1.48/1000。RW 分析显示,资源利用和成本存在不同的影响。大多数贫困相关和非传染性疾病表明资源需求增加和相关成本增加,除了艾滋病毒/艾滋病和糖尿病,呈混合趋势。在伤害方面,道路交通伤害始终降低资源需求和成本,但自杀病例呈混合趋势。
COVID-19 对资源利用和成本的影响更为严重,特别是贫困相关疾病的延长 LOS 和医院死亡率高于非传染性疾病和伤害。