Currie C J, Williams D R, Peters J R
Department of Public Health Medicine, South Glamorgan Health Authority, Cardiff, UK.
Diabet Med. 1996 Mar;13(3):273-80. doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1096-9136(199603)13:3<273::AID-DIA57>3.0.CO;2-S.
The objective was to describe, by means of a retrospective study of three years' routine District information (financial years 1991/92 to 1993/94), the in- and out-patient activity for patients with diabetes, and compare this with the non-diabetic population. The clinical resource usage by patients with diabetes relative to those without was estimated by (a) their relative probability of admission by specialty, (b) attendance rates at out-patient clinics, (c) primary diagnosis, and (d) operations and procedures. The setting was a District Health Authority with a population of 408 000. All in-patient and out-patient records were reclassified as attributable to a patient with or without diabetes by cross-referral to routine records of patients with identified diabetes from separate hospital databases. The main outcome measures were: (a) relative frequency, and crude and age-specific relative probability of admission by specialty, ICD9 primary diagnosis, and OPCS4 primary operation and procedure, and (b) out-patient attendance rates by specialty. Patients with diabetes were responsible for 5.5% of admissions and 6.4% of out-patient attendances. However, because of increased length of stay, patients with diabetes occupy 9.4% of bed days. The relative risk of admission for diabetes related complications was: coronary heart disease 11.8 (95% CI = 11.4-12.3), cerebrovascular disease 11.8 (10.8-12.8), neuropathy and peripheral vascular disease 15.6 (13.6-17.9), eye complications 10.4 (9.3-11.7), and renal disease 14.7 (12.6-17.3). Recognised diabetes related vascular (9.3-11.7), and renal disease 14.7 (12.6-17.3). Recognised diabetes related vascular complications accounted for at least 23% of admissions of patients with diabetes. The relative risk of admission for diagnoses and procedures not known to be related to diabetes were similar for non-diabetic and diabetic patients. The pattern of out-patient activity mirrored that of the relative probability of admission. It is concluded that previous estimates of the proportion of NHS resources used for the treatment of patients with diabetes had been significantly underestimated. Patients with diabetes were found to occupy 1 in 10 non-obstetric, non-psychiatric beds. Many of these admissions were for diagnoses and procedures that are known to be related to diabetes.
目的是通过对三年常规地区信息(1991/92财政年度至1993/94财政年度)的回顾性研究,描述糖尿病患者的门诊和住院活动,并将其与非糖尿病患者群体进行比较。通过以下方面估计糖尿病患者相对于非糖尿病患者的临床资源使用情况:(a)按专科分类的相对入院概率;(b)门诊就诊率;(c)初步诊断;(d)手术和操作。研究背景是一个拥有40.8万人口的地区卫生管理局。通过对照来自独立医院数据库中已确诊糖尿病患者的常规记录,将所有住院和门诊记录重新分类为可归因于糖尿病患者或非糖尿病患者。主要结局指标为:(a)按专科、ICD9初步诊断、OPCS4主要手术和操作分类的相对频率、粗相对概率和年龄特异性相对入院概率;(b)按专科分类的门诊就诊率。糖尿病患者占入院人数的5.5%,门诊就诊人数的6.4%。然而,由于住院时间延长,糖尿病患者占用了9.4%的床位日。糖尿病相关并发症的相对入院风险为:冠心病11.8(95%CI=11.4 - 12.3),脑血管疾病11.8(10.8 - 12.8),神经病变和周围血管疾病15.6(13.6 - 17.9),眼部并发症10.4(9.3 - 11.7),肾脏疾病14.7(12.6 - 17.3)。已确认的糖尿病相关血管并发症(9.3 - 11.7)和肾脏疾病14.7(12.6 - 17.3)。已确认的糖尿病相关血管并发症至少占糖尿病患者入院人数的23%。已知与糖尿病无关的诊断和操作的相对入院风险在非糖尿病患者和糖尿病患者中相似。门诊活动模式反映了相对入院概率的模式。结论是,此前对用于治疗糖尿病患者的国民保健制度资源比例的估计被严重低估。发现糖尿病患者占用了十分之一的非产科、非精神科床位。这些入院病例中有许多是因已知与糖尿病相关的诊断和操作。