Diagnosis-Related Group in Colon Surgery: Identifying Areas of Improvement to Drive High-Value Care
Autor: | Samantha A. Moore, Hemalkumar B. Mehta, Byron D. Hughes, Anthony J. Senagore, Yong Shan |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
business.industry medicine.medical_treatment Diagnosis-related group Retrospective cohort study General Medicine Process of care Patient care 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Colon surgery 030220 oncology & carcinogenesis Emergency medicine medicine Clinical endpoint 030212 general & internal medicine business Care program Colectomy |
Zdroj: | The American Surgeon. 85:256-260 |
ISSN: | 1555-9823 0003-1348 |
DOI: | 10.1177/000313481908500328 |
Popis: | Diagnosis-related group (DRG) migration is defined as the reassignment of colectomy patients from DRG 331 to 330 based exclusively on postoperative complications. Strategic and comparative application of this metric has the potential to demonstrate baseline and excessive rates of complications related directly to patient care differences across institutions. The aim of this study was to report the variability of DRG migration across United States hospitals and its impact on overall cost and length of stay (LOS). This study investigated the variability of DRG migration rates across United States hospitals polling 5 per cent of the national Medicare data. The study end-points were total cost, LOS, and DRG migration rate. Hospitals were classified into tertiles for low (0.1–16.6%), moderate (16.7–23.0%), and high (23.1–83.3%) DRG migration rates. The study included 5120 patients from 615 hospitals. DRG migration rates for hospitals ranged from 0.1 per cent to 83.3 per cent, with 157 in the low, 183 in the moderate, and 364 in the high tertile. DRG migration resulted in a progressively increased LOS and hospital costs from the lowest to highest tertile. Several diagnoses were identified which are suggestive of failure to integrate evidence-based processes of care across the tertiles. The data confirm a wide variation in DRG migration rates from DRG 331 to 330 based only on postoperative complications. These ranges allow for the potential definition of both best practice, and opportunities for quality improvement with respect to postoperative complications, identification of hospital outliers, and the economics of care as part of a value-based care program. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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