| Literature DB >> 32934195 |
Ying Zhou1, Di Yang2, Qiang Fu2, Tao Chen1, Yong Chen1, Chuandong Zheng1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND Previous research has focused on poor outcomes from a lack of insurance, but the effects of different types of insurance for patients with sepsis in the intensive care unit (ICU) have not been well studied. We aimed to investigate whether private health insurance was better than government-run health insurance in the United States in terms of clinical outcomes of patients with sepsis in the ICU. MATERIAL AND METHODS Patients with sepsis were identified from the Medical information Mart for Intensive Care-III database. Patients were grouped as having private and government-run health insurance. Clinical outcomes were compared in univariate and multivariate analyses. Propensity score match (PSM) and subgroup analysis were used to check the robustness of results. RESULTS Data from 13,957 patients were extracted. After adjustment by multivariate model, the private insurance group had similar rates of ICU mortality (relative risk [RR] [95% confidence interval CI]=1.052 [0.919-1.205], P=.463) and 90-day (RR [95% CI]=.964 [0.885-1.051], P=.406) compared with the group with government-run insurance. The private insurance group had longer ICU stays (strictly standardized mean difference=0.092, P<.001) and better long-term survival (hazard ratio [95% CI]=0.875 [0.825-0.928], P<.001) than the government-run insurance group in the PSM cohorts. Subgroup analysis indicated little variation in results for specific conditions. CONCLUSIONS Patients with sepsis who had private insurance had longer ICU stays but similar ICU mortality and 90-day mortality rates than similar patients with government-run insurance; they seemed to have better long-term survival, but more evidence may be required to support this conclusion.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32934195 PMCID: PMC7519944 DOI: 10.12659/MSM.924954
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Sci Monit ISSN: 1234-1010
Figure 1The analysis flow chart of the current study. Data were extracted from the MIMIC-III database. The number of records for each step are in brackets. Multivariate analysis was applied to both unmatched and matched data, so there is a two-way arrow between the propensity score match and multivariate analysis.
Baseline and outcomes of original and propensity-score-matched cohorts with government-run and private insurance.
| Insurance type | Unmatched data | Matched data | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Government-run | Private | SSMD | Government-run | Private | SSMD | |||
| No. | 10205 | 3654 | 3418 | 3418 | ||||
| Demographic data | ||||||||
| Male (%) | 5316 (52.1) | 2179 (59.6) | <0.001 | 0.152 | 2066 (60.4) | 2035 (59.5) | 0.459 | 0.019 |
| Age (Median [IQR]) | 72.00 [61.00, 80.00] | 57.00 [47.00, 63.00] | <0.001 | 1.020 | 56.00 [48.00, 65.00] | 57.00 [49.00, 63.00] | 0.755 | 0.005 |
| First care unite (%) | <0.001 | 0.147 | 0.151 | 0.063 | ||||
| CCU | 1335 (13.1) | 392 (10.7) | 337 (9.9) | 374 (10.9) | ||||
| CSRU | 819 (8.0) | 261 (7.1) | 219 (6.4) | 246 (7.2) | ||||
| MICU | 5764 (56.5) | 1969 (53.9) | 1934 (56.6) | 1853 (54.2) | ||||
| SICU | 1414 (13.9) | 605 (16.6) | 584 (17.1) | 570 (16.7) | ||||
| TSICU | 873 (8.6) | 427 (11.7) | 344 (10.1) | 375 (11.0) | ||||
| Admission type (%) | <0.001 | 0.096 | 0.998 | 0.002 | ||||
| Elective | 543 (5.3) | 257 (7.0) | 237 (6.9) | 237 (6.9) | ||||
| Emergency | 9417 (92.3) | 3272 (89.5) | 3067 (89.7) | 3066 (89.7) | ||||
| Urgent | 245 (2.4) | 125 (3.4) | 114 (3.3) | 115 (3.4) | ||||
| Disease severity evaluations | ||||||||
| SOFA score (median [IQR]) | 5.00 [3.00, 8.00] | 5.00 [3.00, 8.00] | 0.218 | 0.016 | 5.00 [3.00, 8.00] | 5.00 [3.00, 8.00] | 0.044 | 0.029 |
| SAPSII score (median [IQR]) | 41.00 [33.00, 50.00] | 36.00 [27.00, 47.00] | <0.001 | 0.305 | 36.00 [28.00, 47.00] | 36.00 [27.00, 47.00] | 0.850 | 0.017 |
| Elixhauser score (median [IQR]) | 11.00 [6.00, 17.00] | 10.00 [5.00, 17.00] | <0.001 | 0.118 | 11.00 [5.00, 17.00] | 10.00 [5.00, 17.00] | 0.001 | 0.068 |
| Vasopressor use in first day (%) | 2768 (27.1) | 931 (25.5) | 0.056 | 0.037 | 907 (26.5) | 879 (25.7) | 0.457 | 0.019 |
| Mechanical ventilation in the first day (%) | 4513 (44.2) | 1796 (49.2) | <0.001 | 0.099 | 1660 (48.6) | 1668 (48.8) | 0.865 | 0.005 |
| Outcomes | ||||||||
| ICU mortality (%) | 1480 (14.5) | 460 (12.6) | 0.005 | 0.056 | 427 (12.5) | 440 (12.9) | 0.663 | 0.011 |
| Length of ICU stay (median [IQR]) | 3.84 [1.90, 8.66] | 4.53 [2.11, 10.83] | <0.001 | 0.138 | 3.96 [1.97, 9.24] | 4.46 [2.11, 10.77] | <0.001 | 0.092 |
| 90-day mortality (%) | 5993 (58.7) | 2006 (54.9) | <0.001 | 0.077 | 1928 (56.4) | 1899 (55.6) | 0.495 | 0.017 |
ICU – Intensive Care Unit; IQR – interquartile range; CCU – Cardiac Care Unit; CSRU – Cardiac Surgery Recovery Unit; MICU – Medical Intensive Care Unit; SICU – Surgery Intensive Care Unit; TSICU – Trauma/Surgical Intensive Care Unit; SSMD – strictly standardized mean difference; SOFA – sequential organ failure assessment; SAPSII – Simplified Acute Physiology Score II.
Multivariate analysis of private insurance in different cohorts.
| Multivariate analysis of private insurance in: | HR/RR (95%CIs) | |
|---|---|---|
| ICU mortality (unmatched) | 1.052 (0.919–1.205) | 0.463 |
| ICU mortality (matched) | 1.024 (0.876–1.198) | 0.764 |
| 90-day mortality (unmatched) | 0.964 (0.885–1.051) | 0.406 |
| 90-day mortality (matched) | 0.987 (0.895–1.088) | 0.788 |
| Long-term survival (unmatched) | 0.875 (0.825–0.928) | <0.001 |
| Long-term survival (matched) | 0.886 (0.829–0.948) | <0.001 |
RR calculated with logistic regression model;
HR calculated with cox proportional risk model.
HR – hazard ratio; RR – risk ratio; CIs – confidence intervals.
Figure 2Subgroup analysis of association between insurance type and ICU mortality (A) and 90-day mortality (B) rates. The government-run insurance group is the reference group; risk ratios of the private insurance group are displayed and plotted with their 95% CIs on the right (the forest plot). ICU – Intensive Care Unit; CCU – Cardiac Care Unit; CSRU – Cardiac Surgery Recovery Unit; MICU – Medical ICU; SICU – Surgical ICU; TSICU – Thoracic Surgery ICU; SOFA – Sequential Organ Failure Assessment; and SAPS II – Simplified Acute Physiology Score II.
Figure 3Kaplan-Meier survival curves of patients with different insurance types from the original data (A) and matched data (B). The curves describe the survival probability of each cohort at each day after admission to the ICU to the endpoint (censor or death). Median survival times for the two cohorts from the original data were 277 and 1 005 days, respectively; from the matched data, they were 534 and 924 days, respectively (the horizontal position of the dashed lines). The numbers below the plots refer to the patients at risk of death for every 1 000 days.