Payne S M, Donahue C, Rappo P, McNamara J J, Bass J, First L, Kulig J, Palfrey S, Siegel B, Homer C
Boston (Mass) University School of Public Health.
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 1995 Feb;149(2):162-9. doi: 10.1001/archpedi.1995.02170140044006.
To explore through a pilot study the relationship between appropriateness (medical necessity) and variations in pediatric hospital admission rates across several communities in the Boston (Mass) area for two common pediatric conditions with extremely variable admission rates: pneumonia and bronchitis/asthma.
We identified five communities in the greater Boston area with high, average, and below-average ratios of observed to expected admissions for the study conditions. Diagnosis-specific, criteria-based utilization review instruments were developed by community-based pediatricians and applied by trained nurse reviewers to medical records. ADMISSIONS STUDIED: All admissions for pneumonia (diagnosis related group [DRG] 91) and bronchitis/asthma (DRG 98) of study area residents younger than 18 years to participating hospitals during fiscal year 1986.
For each area, we calculated age-adjusted admission rates, age-adjusted observed to expected ratios, and rates of inappropriate admissions. We tested the hypothesis that admission rates and inappropriateness rates were directly related.
We deemed 9.4% of pneumonia admissions and 4.4% of bronchitis/asthma admissions inappropriate. Rates of inappropriate admissions were not significantly associated with admission rates in this local pilot study for either study condition at P < .05. However, in one community both rates were high for both conditions. Feedback of findings to the key local hospital there resulted in sharp decreases in admission rates for DRGs 91 and 98 in subsequent years.
Our results suggest that higher pediatric admission rates may not be associated with higher rates of inappropriateness. Further research is needed, with a larger number of communities, to differentiate practice patterns more precisely and explore patient and family preferences.
通过一项试点研究,探讨波士顿(马萨诸塞州)地区几个社区中两种常见儿科疾病(肺炎和支气管炎/哮喘,其住院率差异极大)的住院适宜性(医疗必要性)与儿科住院率变化之间的关系。
我们在大波士顿地区确定了五个社区,这些社区针对研究疾病的观察到的与预期的住院率之比分别为高、平均和低于平均水平。由社区儿科医生制定了针对特定诊断、基于标准的利用审查工具,并由经过培训的护士审查员应用于病历。
1986财年,研究区域内18岁以下居民因肺炎(诊断相关组[DRG]91)和支气管炎/哮喘(DRG 98)入住参与研究医院的所有住院病例。
对于每个地区,我们计算了年龄调整后的住院率、年龄调整后的观察到的与预期的比率以及不适当住院率。我们检验了住院率与不适当率直接相关的假设。
我们认为9.4%的肺炎住院病例和4.4%的支气管炎/哮喘住院病例是不适当的。在本局部试点研究中,对于这两种研究疾病,不适当住院率与住院率在P<0.05时均无显著关联。然而,在一个社区中,这两种疾病的这两个比率都很高。向当地主要医院反馈研究结果后,随后几年DRG 91和98的住院率大幅下降。
我们的结果表明,较高的儿科住院率可能与较高的不适当率无关。需要进一步开展研究,纳入更多社区,以更精确地区分实践模式,并探索患者及家庭的偏好。