Chan Moses Y H, Malik Shair A, Hallstrom Brian R, Hughes Richard E
Department of Industrial and Operations Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Michigan Health System, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
J Arthroplasty. 2016 Jun;31(6):1179-1182. doi: 10.1016/j.arth.2015.11.037. Epub 2015 Dec 7.
The increasing readmission risk of primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA) represents a significant economic burden and public health challenge. Many have investigated the predictors of readmissions after TKA while little work has studied the associated readmission costs. This article investigated the factors affecting readmission cost after primary TKA at the time of initial discharges using clinical and resource-use information and compared the factors between 2 payer groups (Medicare-or-Medicaid and non-Medicare-nor-Medicaid groups).
We used data from the Michigan State Inpatient Database of the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. We identified readmissions after primary TKA in 2012 using International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, code 81.54. Total readmission cost was modeled using multivariate regression to identify predictors.
Of 1358 readmissions after primary TKA, 949 were in the Medicare-or-Medicaid group, and 409 were in the non-Medicare-nor-Medicaid group. The overall mean and median total readmission costs were $9335 (standard deviation $10,528) and $6810, respectively. Significant predictors of total readmission cost for the Medicare-or-Medicaid group included length of stay (P < .001), discharge disposition (P < .001), number of chronic conditions (P = .001), and total cost of initial admission (P < .001). Only total cost of initial admission was significant in predicting total readmission cost for the non-Medicare-nor-Medicaid group (P < .001).
Total cost of initial admission was a significant predictor of total readmission cost in both Medicare-or-Medicaid and non-Medicare-nor-Medicaid groups, independent of length of stay and number of chronic conditions.
初次全膝关节置换术(TKA)再入院风险的增加带来了巨大的经济负担和公共卫生挑战。许多人已经研究了TKA术后再入院的预测因素,而很少有研究关注相关的再入院成本。本文利用临床和资源使用信息,研究了初次TKA术后初次出院时影响再入院成本的因素,并比较了两个支付者组(医疗保险或医疗补助组以及非医疗保险和非医疗补助组)之间的这些因素。
我们使用了医疗保健研究与质量局医疗成本和利用项目的密歇根州住院患者数据库中的数据。我们使用国际疾病分类第九版代码81.54识别了2012年初次TKA术后的再入院情况。使用多变量回归对总再入院成本进行建模以识别预测因素。
在初次TKA术后的1358例再入院病例中,949例在医疗保险或医疗补助组,409例在非医疗保险和非医疗补助组。总的再入院成本的总体均值和中位数分别为9335美元(标准差10528美元)和6810美元。医疗保险或医疗补助组总再入院成本的显著预测因素包括住院时间(P <.001)、出院处置方式(P <.001)、慢性病数量(P =.001)和初次入院总成本(P <.001)。对于非医疗保险和非医疗补助组,只有初次入院总成本在预测总再入院成本方面具有显著性(P <.001)。
初次入院总成本是医疗保险或医疗补助组以及非医疗保险和非医疗补助组总再入院成本的显著预测因素,与住院时间和慢性病数量无关。