The Association of High-Quality Hospital Use on Health Care Outcomes for Pediatric Congenital Heart Defects in a Universal Health Care System.
Amber El-AminTracey Pérez KoehlmoosDahai YueJie ChenNam Yong ChoPeyman BenharashLuisa FranziniPublished in: Military medicine (2024)
After controlling for patient-level and facility-level covariates and adjusting for endogeneity, (1) HQH use did not increase the probability of more than one admission post 1-year CHD diagnosis, (2) HQH use lowered the probability of annual ER use post 1-year CHD diagnosis, and (3) HQH use did not increase the probability of mortality post 1-year CHD diagnosis. Patients who may have benefited from utilizing HQH for CHD care did not, alluding to potential barriers to access, such as health insurance restrictions or lack of patient awareness. Although we used hospital quality rating for congenital cardiac surgery as reported by the Society of Thoracic Surgeons, the contributing data span a 4-year period and may not reflect real-time changes in center performance. Since this study focused on inpatient care within the first-year post-initial CHD diagnosis, it may not reflect the full range of health system utilization. It is necessary for clinicians and patient advocacy groups to collaborate with policymakers to promote the development of an overarching HQH designation authority for CHD care. Such establishment will facilitate access to HQH for military beneficiary populations suffering from CHD.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- palliative care
- health insurance
- affordable care act
- quality improvement
- cardiac surgery
- case report
- emergency department
- pain management
- acute care
- mental health
- acute kidney injury
- spinal cord
- machine learning
- cardiovascular events
- spinal cord injury
- skeletal muscle
- climate change
- coronary artery disease
- risk assessment
- adverse drug
- posttraumatic stress disorder
- human health
- social media