Li Kathleen Y, Gore John L, Phelan Elizabeth A, Hall Jane, Gunaje Navya, Sabbatini Amber K
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA, USA.
Department of Urology, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA, USA.
Am J Emerg Med. 2025 Feb;88:145-151. doi: 10.1016/j.ajem.2024.11.078. Epub 2024 Nov 26.
Transfer of patients between hospitals is common, costly, and over 20 % are estimated to be avoidable, meaning patients do not receive specialized interventions once transferred. Older adults are more likely to be transferred and may be at increased risk for developing delirium or other complications due to transfer. We aimed to determine the frequency of potentially avoidable transfer (PAT) among older adults; identify conditions most likely to involve a PAT; and describe factors associated with PAT.
We performed a retrospective analysis of ED visits resulting in transfer to another hospital from 2008 to 2019 among Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries 65 years and older. We defined PAT based on resource use at the receiving hospital - transfers resulting in a treat-and-release ED visit, observation stay, or inpatient hospitalization for 2 days or less who received no intensive care or advanced procedure and were discharged alive. We identified conditions with the highest rates of PAT and used multivariable logistic regression to identify the independent association of patient, diagnosis, hospital, and community-linked characteristics with PAT.
Among ∼3 million transfers, 11.3 % met criteria for PAT. Transferring hospitals varied in their rates of PAT, with a median (IQR) rate of 10.3 % (7.2-14.6). Conditions with high rates of PAT included transient cerebral ischemia (35.3 %), nonspecific chest pain (25.5 %), syncope (22.9 %), other fractures (18.4 %), and intracranial injury (16.9 %). These conditions were also associated with PAT in multivariable logistic regression (average marginal effect [AME] 28.2 % (95 %CI 27.4-29.1), 20.6 % (19.8-21.5), 19.2 % (18.5-19.9), 13.4 % (12.9-13.9), and 12.8 % (12.2-13.4), respectively, compared to transfers for sepsis). Patients who were age 85 and older, female, non-White, had fewer comorbidities, and large, for-profit, teaching, and critical access hospitals, and counties with high uninsurance rates were associated with higher likelihood of PAT. Safety net and rural hospitals, and hospitals in counties with high poverty rates were associated with lower likelihood of PAT.
PATs were common in transfers of older adults, particularly among a subset of neurologic, cardiovascular, and injury-related conditions. These conditions may represent ideal targets for intervention to decrease rates of avoidable transfer. Research exploring hospital variation in transfer practices and the impact of PAT on older adults' health outcomes are also needed.
医院间的患者转运很常见,成本高昂,据估计超过20%的转运是可避免的,这意味着患者转运后未接受专科干预。老年人更有可能被转运,并且由于转运可能发生谵妄或其他并发症的风险增加。我们旨在确定老年人中潜在可避免转运(PAT)的频率;识别最有可能涉及PAT的病症;并描述与PAT相关的因素。
我们对2008年至2019年期间65岁及以上医疗保险按服务收费受益人中因急诊就诊而转至另一家医院的情况进行了回顾性分析。我们根据接收医院的资源使用情况定义PAT——导致接受治疗并出院的急诊就诊、观察住院或住院时间为2天或更短且未接受重症监护或高级程序且存活出院的转运。我们确定了PAT发生率最高的病症,并使用多变量逻辑回归来确定患者、诊断、医院和社区相关特征与PAT的独立关联。
在约300万次转运中,11.3%符合PAT标准。转运医院的PAT发生率各不相同,中位数(四分位间距)发生率为10.3%(7.2 - 14.6)。PAT发生率高的病症包括短暂性脑缺血(35.3%)、非特异性胸痛(25.5%)、晕厥(22.9%)、其他骨折(18.4%)和颅内损伤(16.9%)。在多变量逻辑回归中,这些病症也与PAT相关(平均边际效应[AME]分别为28.2%(95%CI 27.4 - 29.1)、20.6%(19.8 - 21.5)、19.2%(18.5 - 19.9)、13.4%(12.9 - 13.9)和12.8%(12.2 - 13.4),与因败血症而转运的情况相比)。85岁及以上、女性、非白人、合并症较少的患者,以及大型、营利性、教学和急救医院,以及未参保率高的县与PAT的可能性较高相关。安全网医院、农村医院以及贫困率高的县的医院与PAT的可能性较低相关。
PAT在老年人转运中很常见,尤其是在一些神经系统、心血管系统和与损伤相关的病症中。这些病症可能是减少可避免转运率干预措施的理想目标。还需要研究探索医院转运做法的差异以及PAT对老年人健康结果的影响。