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Published in: Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 1/2017

01-01-2017 | 2016 SSAT Plenary Presentation

Surgeon Characteristics Supersede Hospital Characteristics in Mortality After Urgent Colectomy

Authors: Richard S. Hoehn, Dennis J. Hanseman, Alex L. Chang, Megan C. Daly, Audrey E. Ertel, Daniel E. Abbott, Shimul A. Shah, Ian M. Paquette

Published in: Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | Issue 1/2017

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Abstract

Background

Urgent colectomy is a common procedure with a high mortality rate that is performed by a variety of surgeons and hospitals. We investigated patient, surgeon, and hospital characteristics that predicted mortality after urgent colectomy.

Methods

The University HealthSystem Consortium was queried for adults undergoing urgent or emergent colectomy between 2009 and 2013 (n = 50,707). Hospitals were grouped into quartiles according to risk-adjusted observed-to-expected (O/E) mortality ratios and compared using the 2013 American Hospital Association Annual Survey. Multiple logistic regression was used to determine patient and provider characteristics associated with in-hospital mortality.

Results

The overall mortality rate after urgent colectomy was 9 %. Mortality rates were higher for patients with extreme severity of illness (27.6 %), lowest socioeconomic status (10.6 %), weekend admissions (10.7 %), and open (10.5 %) and total (15.8 %) colectomies. Hospitals with the lowest O/E ratios were smaller and had lower volume and less teaching intensity, but there were no significant trends with regard to financial (expenses, payroll, capital expenditures per bed) or personnel characteristics (physicians, nurses, technicians per bed). On multivariate analysis, mortality was associated with patient age (10 years: OR 1.31, p < 0.01), severity of illness (extreme: OR 34.68, p < 0.01), insurance status (Medicaid: OR 1.24, p < 0.01; uninsured: OR 1.40, p < 0.01), and weekend admission (OR 1.09, p = 0.04). Surgeon volume was associated with reduced mortality (per 10 cases: OR 0.99, p < 0.01), but hospital volume was not (per case: OR 1.00, p = 0.84).

Conclusions

Mortality is common after urgent colectomy and is associated with patient characteristics. Surgeon volume and practice patterns predicted differences in mortality, whereas hospital factors did not. These data suggest that policies focusing solely on hospital volume ignore other more important predictors of patient outcomes.
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Metadata
Title
Surgeon Characteristics Supersede Hospital Characteristics in Mortality After Urgent Colectomy
Authors
Richard S. Hoehn
Dennis J. Hanseman
Alex L. Chang
Megan C. Daly
Audrey E. Ertel
Daniel E. Abbott
Shimul A. Shah
Ian M. Paquette
Publication date
01-01-2017
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery / Issue 1/2017
Print ISSN: 1091-255X
Electronic ISSN: 1873-4626
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11605-016-3254-4

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