Literature DB >> 23959834

Institutional charges and disparities in outpatient brain biopsies in four US States: the State Ambulatory Database (SASD).

Kimon Bekelis, Symeon Missios, David W Roberts.   

Abstract

Several groups have demonstrated the safety of ambulatory brain biopsies, with no patients experiencing complications related to early discharge. Although they appear to be safe, the reasons factoring into the selection of patients have not been investigated. We performed a cross-sectional study involving 504 patients who underwent outpatient and 10,328 patients who underwent inpatient brain biopsies and were registered in State Ambulatory Surgery Databases and State Inpatient Databases respectively for four US States (New York, California, Florida, North Carolina). In a multivariate analysis private insurance (OR 2.45, 95 % CI, 1.85, 3.24), was significantly associated with outpatient procedures. Higher Charlson Comorbidity Index (OR 0.16, 95 % CI, 0.08, 0.32), high income (OR 0.37, 95 % CI, 0.26, 0.53), and high volume hospitals (OR 0.30, 95 % CI, 0.23, 0.39) were associated with a decreased chance of outpatient procedures. No sex, or racial disparities were observed. Institutional charges were significantly less for outpatient brain biopsies. There was no difference in the rate of 30-day postoperative readmissions among inpatient and outpatient procedures. The median charge for inpatient surgery was 51,316 as compared to 12,266 for the outpatient setting (P < 0.0001, Student's t test). Access to ambulatory brain biopsies appears to be more common for patients with private insurance and less comorbidities, in the setting of lower volume hospitals. Further investigation is needed in the direction of mapping these disparities in resource utilization.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23959834     DOI: 10.1007/s11060-013-1227-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurooncol        ISSN: 0167-594X            Impact factor:   4.130


  21 in total

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  5 in total

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