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Quantifying Geographic Variation in Health Care Outcomes in the United States before and after Risk-Adjustment

BACKGROUND: Despite numerous studies of geographic variation in healthcare cost and utilization at the local, regional, and state levels across the U.S., a comprehensive characterization of geographic variation in outcomes has not been published. Our objective was to quantify variation in US health...

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Autores principales: Rosenberg, Barry L., Kellar, Joshua A., Labno, Anna, Matheson, David H. M., Ringel, Michael, VonAchen, Paige, Lesser, Richard I., Li, Yue, Dimick, Justin B., Gawande, Atul A., Larsson, Stefan H., Moses, Hamilton
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5156342/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27973617
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0166762
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author Rosenberg, Barry L.
Kellar, Joshua A.
Labno, Anna
Matheson, David H. M.
Ringel, Michael
VonAchen, Paige
Lesser, Richard I.
Li, Yue
Dimick, Justin B.
Gawande, Atul A.
Larsson, Stefan H.
Moses, Hamilton
author_facet Rosenberg, Barry L.
Kellar, Joshua A.
Labno, Anna
Matheson, David H. M.
Ringel, Michael
VonAchen, Paige
Lesser, Richard I.
Li, Yue
Dimick, Justin B.
Gawande, Atul A.
Larsson, Stefan H.
Moses, Hamilton
author_sort Rosenberg, Barry L.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Despite numerous studies of geographic variation in healthcare cost and utilization at the local, regional, and state levels across the U.S., a comprehensive characterization of geographic variation in outcomes has not been published. Our objective was to quantify variation in US health outcomes in an all-payer population before and after risk-adjustment. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We used information from 16 independent data sources, including 22 million all-payer inpatient admissions from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (which covers regions where 50% of the U.S. population lives) to analyze 24 inpatient mortality, inpatient safety, and prevention outcomes. We compared outcome variation at state, hospital referral region, hospital service area, county, and hospital levels. Risk-adjusted outcomes were calculated after adjusting for population factors, co-morbidities, and health system factors. Even after risk-adjustment, there exists large geographical variation in outcomes. The variation in healthcare outcomes exceeds the well publicized variation in US healthcare costs. On average, we observed a 2.1-fold difference in risk-adjusted mortality outcomes between top- and bottom-decile hospitals. For example, we observed a 2.3-fold difference for risk-adjusted acute myocardial infarction inpatient mortality. On average a 10.2-fold difference in risk-adjusted patient safety outcomes exists between top and bottom-decile hospitals, including an 18.3-fold difference for risk-adjusted Central Venous Catheter Bloodstream Infection rates. A 3.0-fold difference in prevention outcomes exists between top- and bottom-decile counties on average; including a 2.2-fold difference for risk-adjusted congestive heart failure admission rates. The population, co-morbidity, and health system factors accounted for a range of R(2) between 18–64% of variability in mortality outcomes, 3–39% of variability in patient safety outcomes, and 22–70% of variability in prevention outcomes. CONCLUSION: The amount of variability in health outcomes in the U.S. is large even after accounting for differences in population, co-morbidities, and health system factors. These findings suggest that: 1) additional examination of regional and local variation in risk-adjusted outcomes should be a priority; 2) assumptions of uniform hospital quality that underpin rationale for policy choices (such as narrow insurance networks or antitrust enforcement) should be challenged; and 3) there exists substantial opportunity for outcomes improvement in the US healthcare system.
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spelling pubmed-51563422016-12-28 Quantifying Geographic Variation in Health Care Outcomes in the United States before and after Risk-Adjustment Rosenberg, Barry L. Kellar, Joshua A. Labno, Anna Matheson, David H. M. Ringel, Michael VonAchen, Paige Lesser, Richard I. Li, Yue Dimick, Justin B. Gawande, Atul A. Larsson, Stefan H. Moses, Hamilton PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Despite numerous studies of geographic variation in healthcare cost and utilization at the local, regional, and state levels across the U.S., a comprehensive characterization of geographic variation in outcomes has not been published. Our objective was to quantify variation in US health outcomes in an all-payer population before and after risk-adjustment. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We used information from 16 independent data sources, including 22 million all-payer inpatient admissions from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (which covers regions where 50% of the U.S. population lives) to analyze 24 inpatient mortality, inpatient safety, and prevention outcomes. We compared outcome variation at state, hospital referral region, hospital service area, county, and hospital levels. Risk-adjusted outcomes were calculated after adjusting for population factors, co-morbidities, and health system factors. Even after risk-adjustment, there exists large geographical variation in outcomes. The variation in healthcare outcomes exceeds the well publicized variation in US healthcare costs. On average, we observed a 2.1-fold difference in risk-adjusted mortality outcomes between top- and bottom-decile hospitals. For example, we observed a 2.3-fold difference for risk-adjusted acute myocardial infarction inpatient mortality. On average a 10.2-fold difference in risk-adjusted patient safety outcomes exists between top and bottom-decile hospitals, including an 18.3-fold difference for risk-adjusted Central Venous Catheter Bloodstream Infection rates. A 3.0-fold difference in prevention outcomes exists between top- and bottom-decile counties on average; including a 2.2-fold difference for risk-adjusted congestive heart failure admission rates. The population, co-morbidity, and health system factors accounted for a range of R(2) between 18–64% of variability in mortality outcomes, 3–39% of variability in patient safety outcomes, and 22–70% of variability in prevention outcomes. CONCLUSION: The amount of variability in health outcomes in the U.S. is large even after accounting for differences in population, co-morbidities, and health system factors. These findings suggest that: 1) additional examination of regional and local variation in risk-adjusted outcomes should be a priority; 2) assumptions of uniform hospital quality that underpin rationale for policy choices (such as narrow insurance networks or antitrust enforcement) should be challenged; and 3) there exists substantial opportunity for outcomes improvement in the US healthcare system. Public Library of Science 2016-12-14 /pmc/articles/PMC5156342/ /pubmed/27973617 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0166762 Text en © 2016 Rosenberg et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Rosenberg, Barry L.
Kellar, Joshua A.
Labno, Anna
Matheson, David H. M.
Ringel, Michael
VonAchen, Paige
Lesser, Richard I.
Li, Yue
Dimick, Justin B.
Gawande, Atul A.
Larsson, Stefan H.
Moses, Hamilton
Quantifying Geographic Variation in Health Care Outcomes in the United States before and after Risk-Adjustment
title Quantifying Geographic Variation in Health Care Outcomes in the United States before and after Risk-Adjustment
title_full Quantifying Geographic Variation in Health Care Outcomes in the United States before and after Risk-Adjustment
title_fullStr Quantifying Geographic Variation in Health Care Outcomes in the United States before and after Risk-Adjustment
title_full_unstemmed Quantifying Geographic Variation in Health Care Outcomes in the United States before and after Risk-Adjustment
title_short Quantifying Geographic Variation in Health Care Outcomes in the United States before and after Risk-Adjustment
title_sort quantifying geographic variation in health care outcomes in the united states before and after risk-adjustment
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5156342/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27973617
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0166762
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