UMMS Affiliation
Department of Population and Quantitative Health Sciences
Publication Date
2019-04-05
Document Type
Article
Disciplines
Health and Medical Administration | Health Services Administration | Health Services Research | Surgery | Surgical Procedures, Operative
Abstract
Importance: The existing readmission quality metric does not meaningfully distinguish readmissions associated with surgical quality from those that are not associated with surgical quality and thus may not reflect the quality of surgical care.
Objective: To compare a quality metric that classifies readmissions associated with surgical quality with the existing metric of any unplanned readmission in a surgical population.
Design, Setting, and Participants: Cohort study using US nationwide administrative data collected on 4 high-volume surgical procedures performed at 103 Veterans Affairs hospitals from October 1, 2007, through September 30, 2014. Data analysis was conducted from October 1, 2017, to January 24, 2019.
Main Outcomes and Measures: Hospital-level rates of unplanned readmission (existing metric) and surgical readmissions associated with surgical quality (new metric) in the 30 days following hospital discharge for an inpatient surgical procedure.
Results: The study population included 109258 patients who underwent surgery at 103 hospitals. Patients were majority male (94.1%) and white (78.2%) with a mean (SD) age of 64.0 (10.0) years at the time of surgery. After case-mix adjustment, 30-day surgical readmissions ranged from 4.6% (95% CI, 4.5%-4.8%) among knee arthroplasties to 11.1% (95% CI, 10.9%-11.3%) among colorectal resections. The new surgical readmission metric was significantly correlated with facility-level postdischarge complications for all procedures, with rho coefficients ranging from 0.33 (95% CI, 0.13-0.51) for cholecystectomy to 0.52 (95% CI, 0.38-0.68) for colorectal resection. Correlations between postdischarge complications and the new surgical readmission metric were higher than correlations between complications and the existing readmission metric for all procedures examined (knee arthroplasty: 0.50 vs 0.48; hip replacement: 0.44 vs 0.18; colorectal resection: 0.52 vs 0.42; and cholecystectomy: 0.33 vs 0.10). When compared with using the existing readmission metric, using the new surgical readmission metric could change hip replacement-associated payment penalty determinations in 28.4% of hospitals and knee arthroplasty-associated penalties in 26.0% of hospitals.
Conclusions and Relevance: In this study, surgical quality-associated readmissions were more correlated with postdischarge complications at a higher rate than were unplanned readmissions. Thus, a metric based on such readmissions may be a better measure of surgical care quality. This work provides an important step in the development of future value-based payments and promotes evidence-based quality metrics targeting the quality of surgical care.
Keywords
surgery, surgical care quality, readmissions, quality metrics, veterans
Rights and Permissions
Open Access: This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY License. © 2019 Graham LA et al. JAMA Network Open.
DOI of Published Version
10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.1313
Source
JAMA Netw Open. 2019 Apr 5;2(4):e191313. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.1313. Link to article on publisher's site
Journal/Book/Conference Title
JAMA network open
Related Resources
PubMed ID
31002316
Repository Citation
Graham LA, Mull HJ, Wagner TH, Morris MS, Rosen AK, Richman JS, Whittle J, Burns E, Copeland LA, Itani KM, Hawn MT. (2019). Comparison of a Potential Hospital Quality Metric With Existing Metrics for Surgical Quality-Associated Readmission. Open Access Publications by UMass Chan Authors. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.1313. Retrieved from https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/oapubs/3834
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Included in
Health and Medical Administration Commons, Health Services Administration Commons, Health Services Research Commons, Surgery Commons, Surgical Procedures, Operative Commons