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National Patterns of Risk-Standardized Mortality and Readmission After Hospitalization for Acute Myocardial Infarction,Heart Failure,and Pneumonia: Update on Publicly Reported Outcomes Measures Based on the 2013 Release
Authors:Lisa G Suter MD  Shu-Xia Li PhD  Jacqueline N Grady MS  Zhenqiu Lin PhD  Yongfei Wang MS  Kanchana R Bhat MPH  Dima Turkmani DrPH  MBA  Steven B Spivack MPH  Peter K Lindenauer MD  MSc  Angela R Merrill PhD  Elizabeth E Drye MD  SM  Harlan M Krumholz MD  SM  Susannah M Bernheim MD  MHS
Institution:1. Yale New Haven Health Services Corporation/Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation, 1 Church Street, Suite 200, New Haven, CT, 06510, USA
2. Section of Rheumatology, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA
3. Section of Cardiovascular Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA
4. Taybah for Healthcare Consulting, Inc., Plano, TX, USA
5. Baystate Medical Center, Springfield, MA, USA
6. Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, USA
7. Mathematica Policy Research, Inc., Cambridge, MA, USA
8. Section of General Internal Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA
Abstract:

BACKGROUND

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services publicly reports risk-standardized mortality rates (RSMRs) within 30-days of admission and, in 2013, risk-standardized unplanned readmission rates (RSRRs) within 30-days of discharge for patients hospitalized with acute myocardial infarction (AMI), heart failure (HF), and pneumonia. Current publicly reported data do not focus on variation in national results or annual changes.

OBJECTIVE

Describe U.S. hospital performance on AMI, HF, and pneumonia mortality and updated readmission measures to provide perspective on national performance variation.

DESIGN

To identify recent changes and variation in national hospital-level mortality and readmission for AMI, HF, and pneumonia, we performed cross-sectional panel analyses of national hospital performance on publicly reported measures.

PARTICIPANTS

Fee-for-service Medicare and Veterans Health Administration beneficiaries, 65 years or older, hospitalized with principal discharge diagnoses of AMI, HF, or pneumonia between July 2009 and June 2012. RSMRs/RSRRs were calculated using hierarchical logistic models risk-adjusted for age, sex, comorbidities, and patients’ clustering among hospitals.

Results

Median (range) RSMRs for AMI, HF, and pneumonia were 15.1% (9.4–21.0%), 11.3% (6.4–17.9%), and 11.4% (6.5–24.5%), respectively. Median (range) RSRRs for AMI, HF, and pneumonia were 18.2% (14.4–24.3%), 22.9% (17.1–30.7%), and 17.5% (13.6–24.0%), respectively. Median RSMRs declined for AMI (15.5% in 2009–2010, 15.4% in 2010–2011, 14.7% in 2011–2012) and remained similar for HF (11.5% in 2009–2010, 11.9% in 2010–2011, 11.7% in 2011–2012) and pneumonia (11.8% in 2009–2010, 11.9% in 2010–2011, 11.6% in 2011–2012). Median hospital-level RSRRs declined: AMI (18.5% in 2009–2010, 18.5% in 2010–2011, 17.7% in 2011–2012), HF (23.3% in 2009–2010, 23.1% in 2010–2011, 22.5% in 2011–2012), and pneumonia (17.7% in 2009–2010, 17.6% in 2010–2011, 17.3% in 2011–2012).

Conclusions

We report the first national unplanned readmission results demonstrating declining rates for all three conditions between 2009–2012. Simultaneously, AMI mortality continued to decline, pneumonia mortality was stable, and HF mortality experienced a small increase.
Keywords:
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