| Literature DB >> 28422882 |
Boris Sobolev1, Pierre Guy, Katie J Sheehan, Eric Bohm, Lauren Beaupre, Suzanne N Morin, Jason M Sutherland, Michael Dunbar, Donald Griesdale, Susan Jaglal, Lisa Kuramoto.
Abstract
Two hypotheses were offered for the effect of shorter hospital stays on mortality after hip fracture surgery: worsening the quality of care and shifting death occurrence to postacute settings.We tested whether the risk of hospital death after hip fracture surgery differed across years when postoperative stays shortened, and whether care factors moderated the association.Analysis of acute hospital discharge abstracts for subgroups defined by hospital type, bed capacity, surgical volume, and admission time.153,917 patients 65 years or older surgically treated for first hip fracture.Risk of hospital death.We found a decrease in the 30-day risk of hospital death from 7.0% (95%CI: 6.6-7.5) in 2004 to 5.4% (95%CI: 5.0-5.7) in 2012, with an adjusted odds ratio [OR] 0.71 (95%CI: 0.63-0.80). In subgroup analysis, only large community hospitals showed the reduction of ORs by calendar year. No trend was observed in teaching and medium community hospitals. By 2012, the risk of death in large higher volume community hospitals was 34% lower for weekend admissions, OR = 0.66 (95%CI: 0.46-0.95) and 39% lower for weekday admissions, OR = 0.61 (95%CI: 0.40-0.91), compared to 2004. In large lower volume community hospitals, the 2012 risk was 56% lower for weekend admissions, OR = 0.44 (95%CI: 0.26-0.75), compared to 2004.The risk of hospital death after hip fracture surgery decreased only in large community hospitals, despite universal shortening of hospital stays. This supports the concern of worsening the quality of hip fracture care due to shorter stays.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28422882 PMCID: PMC5406098 DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000006683
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) ISSN: 0025-7974 Impact factor: 1.889
Characteristics of 153,917 patients surgically treated for first hip fracture, by calendar year.
Hospital deaths and live discharges within 30 days after surgery by calendar year.
Figure 1Risk of death and live discharge by calendar year, relative to 2004 (dashed line). Year-specific odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals were adjusted for age (85+ vs < 85), sex, preadmission residence (residence vs home), comorbidity (at least 1 acute admission for heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, ischemic heart disease, hypertension, or diabetes in the year prior to admission for hip fracture), fracture type (transcervical vs other), procedure type (fixation vs implant), weekday and time of admission, hospital type and size (teaching, large, medium, or small community), and hospital volume of hip fracture surgery (higher vs lower), demand at index admission (number of admissions in the week of initial hospitalization, larger vs smaller than hospital weekly capacity), time to surgery (2 days or more days vs less), and province of admission. Trend test for odds ratios of death z = −3.9, P < .001. Trend test for odds ratios of discharge z = 5.5, P < .001.
Hospital deaths and live discharges in subgroups defined by hospital type, bed capacity, annual volume of hip fracture surgery, and time of admission∗.
Figure 2Risk of death after surgery by calendar year as compared to 2004 within subgroups defined by hospital type, bed capacity, annual volume of hip fracture surgery, and weekday and time of admission. Differences between years were adjusted for age (85+ vs < 85), sex, preadmission residence (residence vs home), comorbidity (at least 1 acute admission for heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, ischemic heart disease, hypertension, or diabetes in the year prior to admission for hip fracture), fracture type (transcervical vs other), procedure type (fixation vs implant), demand at index admission (number of admissions in the week of initial hospitalization, larger vs smaller than hospital weekly capacity), and time to surgery (2 days or more days vs less).