| Literature DB >> 28938046 |
Daniel P McQuillen1,2, Ann T MacIntyre3,4.
Abstract
While a career in infectious diseases (ID) has always been challenging and exciting, recognition of the value that ID physicians provide to the healthcare system as a whole, over and above the value they provide to individual patients, has been poor in this system. In response to this disparity, the Infectious Diseases Society of America Clinical Affairs Committee has long endeavored to quantify the value of ID physicians to the system, which is challenging in part because of the many avenues through which they influence healthcare. We discuss data showing that ID physicians improve clinical outcomes, positively impact transitions of care, and direct system-level improvements through infection prevention and antimicrobial stewardship. We identify areas where value-based care provides additional future opportunities for ID physicians. A Clinical Affairs Committee-sponsored study of ID physicians' positive impact on patient outcomes shows that few medical specialties are better positioned to positively impact the Triple Aim approach-better health, better care, and lower per capita cost-that is the principle tenet of healthcare system reform. Published by Oxford University Press for the Infectious Diseases Society of America 2017. This work is written by (a) US Government employee(s) and is in the public domain in the US.Entities:
Keywords: ID physician; MACRA; OPAT; antimicrobial stewardship; infection prevention; value
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28938046 PMCID: PMC7107418 DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jix326
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Dis ISSN: 0022-1899 Impact factor: 5.226
Roles of Infectious Diseases (ID) Physicians in the Healthcare System
| Role | Comment(s) | Reference(s) or Source |
|---|---|---|
| Improve outcomes | ||
| Patient care | More correct diagnoses, shorter lengths of stay, more-appropriate therapies, fewer complications, may use fewer antibiotics overall | [3–8] |
|
| Reduced mortality | [9, 10] |
| Medicare recipients (272 327 stays) | Early ID physician intervention lowers costs, decreases length of stay and readmissions, decreases mortality | [12] |
| Privately insured patients (29 050 stays) | Early ID physician intervention shortens length of stay, lowers cost, lowers mortality, lowers chance of readmissions, lowers total healthcare costs over 90 d | Unpublished data |
| Influence transitions of care | ||
| Inpatient consultations (263) for community-based OPAT | Treatment optimized in 84%, significant change in assessment in 52%, additional medical care contribution in 71%, OPAT unnecessary in 27%, effective care transition to outpatient in 86% | [13] |
| Multicenter private practice OPAT (6120 patients) | 57% started therapy in hospital, 94% successfully treated as outpatients, only 3% hospitalized after starting therapy, 19% had therapeutic complication | [14] |
| ID physician–staffed vs ED physician– staffed ED cellulitis clinic | 40% in ID physician–staffed clinic given noncellulitis diagnosis vs 11% in ED physician– staffed clinic, recurrence and hospitalization rates lower in ID physician–staffed clinic, no difference in mortality | [15] |
| Lead infection prevention and antimicrobial stewardship programs | ||
| CDC IP 2016 data | 50% decrease in CLABSI, 17% decrease in SSI, 8% decrease in hospital-acquired CDI | [16] |
| ID physician–led AS program 70-bed rural hospital over 3 years | 42% decrease in antiinfection expenditures, improved | [17] |
| 24-hospital network over 7 years | 50% decrease in HAI rates, decreased costs, prevented 52–105 deaths from CLABSI or VAP | [18] |
| AS in LTAC hospital via remote EHR access | Decreased antibacterial use, decreased CDI rates | [19] |
Abbreviation: AS, antimicrobial stewardship; CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; CDI, Clostridium difficile infection; CLABSI, central line–associated bloodstream infection; ED, emergency department; EHR, electronic health record; HAI, healthcare-associated infection; IP, infection prevention; LTAC, long-term acute care; OPAT, outpatient antimicrobial therapy; P. aeruginosa, Pseudomonas aeruginosa; S. aureus, Staphylococcus aureus; SSI, surgical site infection.
Risk-Adjusted Outcomes for Stays Receiving Early Versus Late Intervention by Infectious Diseases Physicians
| Outcome | Early Interventiona | Late Intervention |
| Percentage Difference (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Index stay, length of stay, d | 13.2 | 13.8 | <.001 | −3.8 (−4.8 to −2.9) | … |
| Index stay, length of ICU stay, db | 7.6 | 8.1 | <.001 | −5.1 (−7.7 to −2.4) | … |
| Index stay, mortality, % | 7.1 | 7.5 | .122 | … | 0.94 (.88–1.02) |
| 30-d mortality, %c | 8.6 | 9.6 | <.001 | … | 0.87 (.82–.93) |
| 30-d readmission rate, %c | 24.6 | 26.1 | <.001 | … | 0.92 (.89–.96) |
| ACH charge for index stay, $ | 95 135 | 98 015 | <.001 | −2.9 (−4.1 to −1.7) | … |
| Medicare payments to ACH for index stay, $ | 18 111 | 18 728 | <.001 | −3.3 (−4.3 to −2.3) | … |
| Medicare payments for index stay, $ | 21 453 | 22 207 | <.001 | −3.4 (−4.3 to −2.5) | … |
| Medicare payments for 30-d episode, $c | 8739 | 9318 | <.001 | −6.2 (−8.8 to −3.5) | … |
Adapted from the article by Schmitt et al [12].
Abbreviations: ACH, acute-care hospital; CI, confidence interval; ICU, intensive care unit; OR, odds ratio.
aWithin 2 days.
bOnly patients with ≥1 d of stay in the ICU.
cExcludes patients dying in the hospital.