Many surgical readmissions can't be
blamed on hospitals
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[June 21, 2016]
By Andrew M. Seaman
(Reuters Health) - When too many surgery
patients come back to a hospital after being sent home, the hospital can
be fined by the federal government. But a new study suggests many of
those so-called readmissions are not the hospital's fault.
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Many readmissions were due to issues like drug abuse or
homelessness, the researchers found. Less than one in five patients
returned to the hospital due to something doctors could have managed
better during the first - or index - hospital stay.
"Very few were due to reasons we could control with better medical
care at the index admission," said lead author Dr. Lisa McIntyre, of
Harborview Medical Center in Seattle.
McIntyre and her colleagues write in JAMA Surgery that the U.S.
government began fining hospitals in 2015 for surgery readmission
rates that are higher than expected. Fines were already being
imposed since 2012 for readmissions following treatments for various
medical conditions.
The researchers studied the medical records of patients who were
discharged from their hospital's general surgery department in 2014
or 2015 and readmitted within 30 days.
General surgery includes operations to fix hernias, for example, or
to remove a gallbladder or appendix.
Out of the 2,100 discharges during that time, there were 173
unplanned readmissions.
About 17 percent of readmissions were due to injection drug use and
about 15 percent were due to issues like homelessness or difficulty
getting to follow-up appointments.
Only about 18 percent of readmissions - about 2 percent of all
discharges - were due to potentially avoidable problems following
surgery.
While the results are only from a single hospital, that hospital is
also a safety-net facility for the local area - and McIntyre pointed
out that all hospitals have some amount of disadvantaged patients.
"To be able to affect this rate, there are going to need to be new
interventions that require money and a more global care package of
each individual patient that doesn’t stop at discharge," said
McIntyre, who is also affiliated with the University of Washington.
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Being female, having diabetes, having sepsis upon admission, being
in the ICU and being discharged to respite care were all tied to an
increased risk of readmission, the researchers found.
The results raise the question of whether readmission rates are
valuable measures of surgical quality, write Drs. Alexander Schwed
and Christian de Virgilio of the University of California, Los
Angeles in an editorial.
Some would argue that readmitting patients is a sound medical
decision that is tied to lower risks of death, they write.
"Should such an inexact marker of quality be used to financially
penalize hospitals?" they ask. "Health services researchers (need to
find) a better marker for surgical quality that is reliably
calculable and clinically useful."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/28Km3aH and http://bit.ly/28Km3Ye JAMA
Surgery, online June 15, 2016.
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