M Bruce Edmonson1, Jens C Eickhoff2, Chong Zhang2. 1. Division of General Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, WI. 2. Department of Biostatistics and Medical Informatics, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, WI.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To describe the clinical spectrum and frequency of acute care revisits after tonsillectomy in a population-based sample from a single state in the US. STUDY DESIGN: We used California state discharge databases from 2009 to 2011 to retrospectively identify retrospectively routine tonsillectomy discharges in residents <25 years of age and to establish record linkage to revisits within 30 days at ambulatory surgery, inpatient, and emergency department facilities statewide. Percentages and descriptive statistics were sample-weighted, and revisit rates were adjusted for demographic factors, expected payer, chronic conditions, surgical indication, facility type, and clustering. RESULTS: Records were available for 35 085 index tonsillectomies, most of which were performed at hospital-owned ambulatory and inpatient facilities. There were 4944 associated revisits: 3761 (75.9%) treat-and-release emergency room visits, 816 (17.1%) inpatient admissions, and 367 (7.0%) ambulatory surgery visits. Most revisits (3225 [67.7%]) were unrelated to bleeding; these typically occurred early (mode, day 2) and were commonly associated with diagnosis codes indicating pain, nausea/vomiting, or dehydration. Crude all-cause revisit and readmission rates were 10.5% and 2.1%, respectively. Adjusted all-cause revisit rates (range, 8.6%-24.5%) were lowest in young children, increased in adolescents, and peaked in young adults. Adjusted bleeding-related revisit rates increased abruptly in adolescents and reached 13.9% in males (6.8% in females, P < .001) ages 20-24 years. CONCLUSIONS: Acute care revisits after tonsillectomy performed at predominantly hospital-owned facilities in California are common and strongly age-related. Most revisits are early treat-and-release outpatient encounters, and these are usually associated with potentially preventable problems such as pain, nausea and vomiting, and dehydration.
OBJECTIVES: To describe the clinical spectrum and frequency of acute care revisits after tonsillectomy in a population-based sample from a single state in the US. STUDY DESIGN: We used California state discharge databases from 2009 to 2011 to retrospectively identify retrospectively routine tonsillectomy discharges in residents <25 years of age and to establish record linkage to revisits within 30 days at ambulatory surgery, inpatient, and emergency department facilities statewide. Percentages and descriptive statistics were sample-weighted, and revisit rates were adjusted for demographic factors, expected payer, chronic conditions, surgical indication, facility type, and clustering. RESULTS: Records were available for 35 085 index tonsillectomies, most of which were performed at hospital-owned ambulatory and inpatient facilities. There were 4944 associated revisits: 3761 (75.9%) treat-and-release emergency room visits, 816 (17.1%) inpatient admissions, and 367 (7.0%) ambulatory surgery visits. Most revisits (3225 [67.7%]) were unrelated to bleeding; these typically occurred early (mode, day 2) and were commonly associated with diagnosis codes indicating pain, nausea/vomiting, or dehydration. Crude all-cause revisit and readmission rates were 10.5% and 2.1%, respectively. Adjusted all-cause revisit rates (range, 8.6%-24.5%) were lowest in young children, increased in adolescents, and peaked in young adults. Adjusted bleeding-related revisit rates increased abruptly in adolescents and reached 13.9% in males (6.8% in females, P < .001) ages 20-24 years. CONCLUSIONS: Acute care revisits after tonsillectomy performed at predominantly hospital-owned facilities in California are common and strongly age-related. Most revisits are early treat-and-release outpatient encounters, and these are usually associated with potentially preventable problems such as pain, nausea and vomiting, and dehydration.
Authors: Nila Sathe; Sivakumar Chinnadurai; Melissa McPheeters; David O Francis Journal: Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg Date: 2017-01-17 Impact factor: 3.497
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