Burnett Alexander C R, Williamson Jennifer, Roberts Aedan G K, Marashi-Pour Sadaf, Hay Liz
Centre for Epidemiology and Evidence, New South Wales Department of Health, St Leonards, NSW, Australia.
Economics and Evaluation Unit, Strategic Reform and Planning, New South Wales Department of Health, St Leonards, NSW, Australia.
PLoS One. 2024 Dec 5;19(12):e0314895. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0314895. eCollection 2024.
Patient reported measures of hospital care are known predictors of readmission, even after accounting for risk related to age and comorbidities. This study aimed to determine the association between patient experience of diabetes-related foot disease (DFD) hospital care and unplanned hospital readmission, with a primary focus on DFD-related readmissions and a secondary focus on all-cause readmissions.
A retrospective longitudinal cohort study was conducted by linking NSW Adult Admitted Patient Survey data with administrative hospital data for persons hospitalised with DFD identified through diagnostic and/or procedure codes. Univariable and multivariable shared-frailty Cox regression models were used to examine the association between key aspects of patient experiences and 90-days unplanned hospital readmission over the period 2019-2022.
Overall, 3,173 DFD patients were included. Ninety-day readmission rates for respondents with DFD were 9% for DFD-related readmissions and 16% for all-cause readmissions. Adults with DFD who could not understand explanations offered by health professionals were at increased risk of DFD-related readmission compared to those who could always understand (Hazard ratio (HR) 2.43, CI: 1.47-4.00), as well as patients who did not feel well enough to leave hospital at discharge (HR 1.93, CI: 1.41-2.64) or reported the care received was not well organised (HR 2.24, 1.45-3.47). Patients reporting that they did not receive enough information regarding their condition, treatment, or how to manage care at home were found to have a DFD-related readmission risk that was 1.5 to 1.8-times greater than those who did. Similar patterns were observed for all-cause readmissions, albeit with generally smaller effect sizes.
The findings highlight that elements of care related to communication, coordination, and involvement in decision making may influence unplanned readmission rates for patients with chronic conditions, such as DFD. The impact appears to be more pronounced for DFD-related readmissions compared to all-cause readmissions.
患者报告的医院护理指标是再入院的已知预测因素,即使在考虑了与年龄和合并症相关的风险之后。本研究旨在确定糖尿病相关足部疾病(DFD)患者的医院护理体验与非计划住院再入院之间的关联,主要关注与DFD相关的再入院情况,次要关注全因再入院情况。
通过将新南威尔士州成人住院患者调查数据与通过诊断和/或程序代码确定的DFD住院患者的医院管理数据相链接,进行了一项回顾性纵向队列研究。使用单变量和多变量共享脆弱性Cox回归模型来检验2019年至2022年期间患者体验的关键方面与90天非计划住院再入院之间的关联。
总体而言,纳入了3173例DFD患者。DFD患者90天的再入院率为:与DFD相关的再入院率为9%,全因再入院率为16%。与那些总能理解的患者相比,无法理解医护人员解释的DFD成年患者与DFD相关的再入院风险增加(风险比(HR)2.43,置信区间:1.47 - 4.00),以及出院时感觉身体还不够好不能出院的患者(HR 1.93,置信区间:1.41 - 2.64)或报告所接受的护理组织不善的患者(HR 2.24,1.45 - 3.47)。报告未获得足够关于其病情、治疗或如何在家中管理护理信息的患者,其与DFD相关的再入院风险比获得足够信息的患者高1.5至1.8倍。全因再入院也观察到类似模式,尽管效应大小通常较小。
研究结果突出表明,与沟通、协调和参与决策相关的护理要素可能会影响慢性病患者(如DFD患者)的非计划再入院率。与全因再入院相比,这种影响在与DFD相关的再入院中似乎更为明显。