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. 2019 Apr;54(4):621-627.
doi: 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2018.10.102. Epub 2018 Nov 28.

Health outcomes and the healthcare and societal cost of optimizing pediatric surgical care in the United States

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Health outcomes and the healthcare and societal cost of optimizing pediatric surgical care in the United States

Katherine T Flynn-O'Brien et al. J Pediatr Surg. 2019 Apr.

Abstract

Background: There is a movement to ensure that pediatric patients are treated in appropriately resourced hospitals through the ACS Children's Surgery Verification (CSV) program. The objective of this study was to assess the potential difference in care provision, health outcomes and healthcare and societal costs after implementation of the CSV program.

Methods: All 2011 inpatient admissions for selected complex pediatric patients warranting treatment at a hospital with Level I resources were evaluated across 6 states. Multivariate regressions were used to analyze differences in healthcare outcomes (postoperative complications including death, length of stay, readmissions and ED visits within 30 days) and costs by CSV level. Recycled predictions were used to estimate differences between the base case scenario, where children actually received care, and the optimized scenario, where all children were theoretically treated at Level I centers.

Results: 8,006 children (mean age 3.06 years, SD 4.49) met inclusion criteria, with 45% treated at Level I hospitals, 30% at Level II and 25% at Level III. No statistically significant differences were observed in healthcare outcomes. Readmissions within 30 days were higher at Level II compared to Level I centers (adjusted IRR 1.61; 95% CI 1.11, 2.34), with an estimated 24 avoidable readmissions per 1000 children if treatment were shifted from Level II to Level I centers. Overall, costs per child were not significantly different between the base case and the optimized scenario.

Conclusion: Many complex surgical procedures are being performed at Level II/III centers. This study found no statistically significant increase in healthcare or societal costs if these were performed instead at Level I centers under the optimized scenario. Ongoing evaluation of efforts to match institutional resources with individual patient needs is needed to optimize children's surgical care in the United States.

Level of evidence: II.

Keywords: Epidemiology; Healthcare costs; Outcomes; Pediatric surgery; Verification.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Hospital classification algorithm Hospital Classification for all Healthcare Cost and Utilization Projectparticipating hospitals in New York, Vermont, Florida, Iowa, Nebraska, and Utah, 2011

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