1 / 29

Readmissions as a measure of quality for neonatal intensive care units (NICU) and outpatient practices

Readmissions as a measure of quality for neonatal intensive care units (NICU) and outpatient practices. SA Lorch 1 , JH Silber 1 , GE Escobar 2 , D Small 3 1 Center for Outcomes Research, Dept of Pediatrics, The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia

callum
Download Presentation

Readmissions as a measure of quality for neonatal intensive care units (NICU) and outpatient practices

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Readmissions as a measure of quality for neonatal intensive care units (NICU) and outpatient practices SA Lorch1, JH Silber1, GE Escobar2,D Small3 1 Center for Outcomes Research, Dept of Pediatrics, The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia 2 Perinatal Research Center, Kaiser Permanente Medical System, Oakland, CA 3 Dept of Statistics, The Wharton School

  2. Background • There is increased interest in measuring the quality of inpatient care by insurers, public agencies, and patients. • One proposed measure: risk-adjusted readmission rates

  3. Conceptual Framework Poor inpatient quality of care Incomplete Evaluation or Management of Condition Increased Readmission Rates

  4. Prior Work • Conflicting data in literature • Ashton (1995): Meta-Analysis, 13 studies • OR 1.55 for readmission if care received at hospital with sub-standard quality • Wide range of metrics and time frame for readmissions • More recent literature did not find this association • Congestive Heart Failure • Myocardial Infarction

  5. Illness Severity Quality of Outpatient Facility Conceptual Framework Poor inpatient quality of care Incomplete Evaluation or Management of Condition Increased Readmission Rates

  6. Goals of Study • Aim 1: Determine the role of NICUs in predicting variations in risk-adjusted readmission rates • Aim 2: Determine how this role changes when site of outpatient care is accounted for • Aim 3: Define characteristics of facilities associated with high risk-adjusted readmission rates

  7. Patient Population • 5 Northern California Kaiser Permanente hospitals • 1998-2001 • Gestational age < 32 weeks at delivery • Survive to hospital discharge • Received care at 1 of 32 outpatient clinics affiliated with the Kaiser Permanente health system

  8. Exclusion Criteria • Major congenital anomalies • Need for home ventilation • Loss to follow-up within 1 year of discharge • Typically from leaving the Kaiser system

  9. Study Definitions • Readmission • Any unplanned rehospitalization within specified time period • Ambulatory-care Sensitive Condition • Any readmission for condition “sensitive” to care provided in outpatient setting • Pneumonia • Asthma • Cellulitis • Failure-to-Thrive • Time Frame: 0-1 month; 0-3 months; 3-12 months

  10. Data Collection • Neonatal data • Neonatal Minimal Data Set: prospective collection of 250 clinical variables, including • Maternal history • Birth history • Complications occurring in NICU • Outpatient data • Cost Management Information System tracked all resources used in the outpatient setting, including • medications and laboratory studies • readmissions, outpatient visits, and emergency room visits • Demographic data used to define area-level socioeconomic data based on zip code

  11. Facility Characteristics • Outpatient facility assigned to child based on site of usual care for well-child visits. • Characteristics: • Use of oral albuterol (poor quality) • Use of inhaled albuterol for asthma symptoms (good quality) • Use of antibiotics for viral illness (poor quality) • Facilities divided into high or low quality for each characteristic.

  12. Statistical Analysis • Multivariable poisson regression models • 2 sets of models • Fixed NICU effects included alone (Aim 1) • Random outpatient effects added to the fixed NICU effects (Aim 2) • Random outpatient effects accounts for smaller numbers of patients at a given outpatient center.

  13. Demographics • 892 infants at 5 NICUs and 32 outpatient facilities • Each NICU discharged to 9-17 outpatient facilities • Each outpatient facility received infants from 1-3 NICUs • Gestational Age 29.5 ± 2.2 wks • Racial/Ethnic Distribution: • 45.5% White non-Hispanic • 20.5% Hispanic • 11.2% Black • 22.8% Asian or Multi-Racial • 16.6% with BPD, 1.8% with NEC

  14. Timing of Readmissions

  15. All Readmissions: Medical Factors All values report incident rate ratios for the given risk factor * P < 0.05; ** P < 0.01; *** P < 0.001

  16. All Readmissions: Sociodemographic Factors All values report incident rate ratios for the given risk factor * P < 0.05; ** P < 0.01; *** P < 0.001

  17. All Readmissions: NICU and Outpatient Facilities

  18. Patient Program NICU Example of Attributable Variation: All readmissions 0-3 months Area of each circle represents the proportional amount of variation attributed to each group of factors.

  19. ACS Readmissions: Medical Factors All values report incident rate ratios for the given risk factor * P < 0.05; ** P < 0.01; *** P < 0.001

  20. ACS Readmissions: Sociodemographic Factors All values report incident rate ratios for the given risk factor * P < 0.05; ** P < 0.01; *** P < 0.001

  21. ACS Readmissions: NICU and Outpatient Facilities

  22. Oral Albuterol Inhaled Albuterol Viral antibiotics Facility Characteristics and Readmissions

  23. Limitations • Data from one health system • NICUs and outpatient facilities with different practices and outcomes • No direct information on family income and socioeconomic status • Cohort more homogeneous than other NICUs, especially academic centers

  24. Conclusions • Patient-level factors were the primary determinants for readmissions after NICU discharge. • NICU measured alone: • Significant variations between sites. • NICU measured with outpatient facilities: • No independent variation between NICUs

  25. Conclusions • Outpatient facility characteristics associated with poor quality are also associated with higher readmission rates: • High oral albuterol use: 0-3 mos and 3-12 mos • High antibiotic use: 3-12 mos • Time frame does matter when examining readmission rates.

  26. Implications for Policy • Readmission rates appear to measure the quality of outpatient facilities, not inpatient hospitals. • Associations with NICU  typical sites of outpatient care to which a NICU discharges.

  27. Acknowledgements • Funded by MCHB R40 MC00238 • Thanks to Marla Gardner and John Greene at Northern California Kaiser Permanente health system.

  28. Why Study NICUs and Premature Infants? • Prematurely-born infants are uniformly admitted to NICUs. • Relatively consistent discharge practices based on development of physiologic skills and weight gain. • Readmission rates after discharge are high, but do not occur in all patients. • Allows for variation among NICUs and outpatient settings

  29. Deficits in Literature • Many conditions do not have validated admission criteria • Wide variations in time frame • Which time frames are valid? • No control for site of outpatient care • Ignoring these factors may lead to faulty assessment of the care provided by inpatient services, such as neonatal intensive care units (NICUs)

More Related