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. 2019 Jul;87(1):140-146.
doi: 10.1097/TA.0000000000002273.

High-performance acute care hospitals: Excelling across multiple emergency general surgery operations in the geriatric patient

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High-performance acute care hospitals: Excelling across multiple emergency general surgery operations in the geriatric patient

Michael P DeWane et al. J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2019 Jul.

Abstract

Background: As the geriatric population grows, the need for hospitals performing high quality emergency general surgery (EGS) on older patients will increase. Identifying clusters of high-performing geriatric emergency general surgery hospitals would substantiate the need for in-depth analyses of hospital-specific structures and practices that benefit older EGS patients. The objectives of this study were therefore to identify clusters of hospitals based on mortality performance for geriatric patients undergoing common EGS operations and to determine if hospital performance was similar for all operation types.

Methods: Hospitals in the California State Inpatient Database were included if they performed a range of eight common EGS operations in patients 65 years or older, with a minimum requirement of three of each operation performed over 2 years. Multivariable beta regression models were created to define hospital-level risk-adjusted mortality. Centroid cluster analysis was used to identify groups of hospitals based on mortality and to determine if mortality-performance differed by operation.

Results: One hundred seven hospitals were included, performing a total of 24,279 operations in older patients. Hospitals separated into three distinct clusters: high, average, and low performers. The high-performing hospitals had survival rates 1 to 2 standard deviations better than the low-performers (p < 0.001). For each cluster, high performance in any one EGS operation consistently translated into high performance across all EGS operations.

Conclusion: Hospitals conducting EGS operations in the geriatric patient population cluster into three distinct groups based on their survival performance. High-performing hospitals significantly outperform the average and low performers across every operation. The high-performers achieve reliable, high-quality results regardless of operation type. Further qualitative research is needed to investigate the perioperative drivers of hospital performance in the geriatric EGS population.

Level of evidence: Study Type Prognostic, level III.

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Conflict of interest statement

DISCLOSURE

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Standard deviation from mean mortality of the low-, average-, and high-performing clusters stratified by operation type.

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