INFORMATION:
The work was published as "Readmission destination and risk of mortality after major surgery: an observational cohort study" online on June 18, 2015 in The Lancet
In addition to Brooke and Finlayson, the authors are Larry Kraiss and Matthew Samore from the University of Utah School of Medicine, Philip Goodney from Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, and Daniel Gottlieb from The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice END
Potential downside to domestic surgical tourism
Study suggests patients who continue care with the same physicians and hospitals are less likely to die from post-surgical complications
2015-06-18
(Press-News.org) Up to 22 percent of surgical patients experience unexpected complications and must be readmitted for post-operative care. A study led by the University of Utah suggests that returning to the same hospital is important for recovery. Readmission to a different hospital was associated with a 26 percent increased risk for dying within 90 days.
The results, published in The Lancet, have implications for patients who take part in domestic medical tourism programs.
Some of the nation's largest businesses encourage employees to travel to large U.S. medical centers for complex elective surgical procedures. As part of these medical travel programs, companies negotiate lower prices for patients to receive high-quality surgical care at some of the nation's premier hospitals.
But many participants must travel long distances - sometimes hundreds of miles from home - to reach destination hospitals, meaning it can be difficult to return should complications arise.
"This is not a small issue. Between 5 to 22 percent of patients were readmitted in our study, depending on the type of surgery," says lead author Benjamin Brooke, M.D., Ph.D., an assistant professor of surgery at the University of Utah School of Medicine. "Our work suggests that striving to maintain continuity of care in the same hospital, and by the same medical team when possible, is critical to achieve the best outcomes should complications arise after surgery."
Returning to the site where the original operation was done was associated with improved survival regardless of whether it was a large teaching hospital or smaller community hospital. Patients fared slightly better when also treated by the same surgical team. The trends held true for patients who underwent a wide range of common operations including neurosurgery, coronary bypass and hernia repair.
Brooke recommends having operations done close to home when possible. Or if traveling to a destination hospital, planning to stay in the area during recovery. He adds that if a patient is readmitted to an outside hospital, "every effort should be made to transfer surgical patients back within 24 hours to their original hospital for post-operative management."
The researchers examined data from 9,440,503 Medicare patients who were readmitted within 30 days after undergoing any of 12 major surgical procedures between 2001 and 2011, the largest analysis of surgical patients of its kind. 66 to 83 percent of patients who had complications were readmitted to the same hospital. Statistical analyses demonstrated that these patients were more likely to survive 90 days after readmission than those who received post-operative treatment at a different hospital.
The trend was consistent across all surgeries, and ranged from a 44 percent decrease in risk for death for those who underwent pancreatectomy, to 13 percent for coronary artery bypass surgery, according to risk-adjusted, inverse probability weighted models. A second statistical method, instrumental variable analysis, showed attenuated results but supported the findings from these models. Because the results are observational in nature, a randomized trial is needed to prove a causal link.
The current results add to mounting evidence that continuity of care leads to better outcomes for a variety of acute and chronic medical conditions. The reports support the notion that returning to the same hospital may be more important than other measures of health care quality such as being treated at large medical centers that perform high volumes of specific procedures.
Senior author Sam Finlayson, M.D., MPH, says even though the current study examined patients of retirement age, it warrants consideration by anyone, no matter how old they are.
"Most people do not think about the implications of traveling far for an operation," says Finlayson, also professor and chair of surgery. "As with many health care decisions, there are trade-offs to consider. Traveling may confer the best chance of a favorable outcome with surgery, but it may hinder access to optimal care in the event of a serious complication after discharge."
"The interesting questions that our results raise are why outcomes appear to be better when a patient returns to the hospital where her or his operation was performed," he says. "Discovering the answers could help improve the way we deliver care."
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
The Lancet: Patients with complications after major surgery more likely to survive if readmitted to the same hospital
2015-06-18
Patients rehospitalized with complications after major surgery are 26% more likely to survive if they return to the hospital where they had their operation compared to those readmitted to a different hospital, according to a national study involving over 9 million Medicare patients in the USA, published in The Lancet.
The findings stand in contrast to current health policies that aim to regionalise major surgical procedures into high volume centres of excellence.
"With up to one in four patients rehospitalized following complex surgery, our results could potentially ...
Doctors protest over Australia's 'repressive legislation' on asylum seekers
2015-06-18
In The BMJ this week, two doctors criticize Australia for passing legislation that may be used to silence doctors working with asylum seekers.
The Border Force Act 2015 says that from July 2015 contracted workers including doctors, nurses, and other healthcare professionals face a prison sentence of up to two years for blowing the whistle on substandard medical care given to asylum seekers in detention centres.
Dr. David Berger at Broome Hospital in Western Australia, argues that the only reason to suppress doctors in this way, 'is to avoid embarrassing revelations ...
Massachusetts General Hospital physicians write of their experiences in Nepal earthquake relief
2015-06-18
Two Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) physicians who participated in the international response to the major earthquakes that hit Nepal in April and May each describe their experiences in Perspectives articles receiving Online First publication today in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Renee Salas, MD, MS, was already in Nepal working at a Himalayan Rescue Association clinic in the remote village of Pheriche when the first 7.8 magnitude quake struck on April 25. As she describes in her article "Humanity, Teamwork and Art in Post-Earthquake Nepal," while the immediate ...
NIH-funded researchers identify new genetic immune disorder
2015-06-18
WHAT:
Researchers funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have identified a new immune disorder--DOCK2 deficiency--named after the mutated gene responsible for the disease. An international team of collaborators studied five children, four boys and one girl, from different ethnic backgrounds who had experienced debilitating infections early in life. The children were diagnosed with combined immunodeficiency (CID), which refers to a group of inherited disorders distinguished by defects in immune system cells called T cells. CIDs also may affect other cells of ...
Value of nonprofit hospital tax exemption nearly doubled over 9 years, reaching $24.6 billion in 2011
2015-06-17
WASHINGTON, June 17 --- The value of the tax exemption provided to non-profit private hospitals in return for 'charity care and community benefit' nearly doubled over a nine-year period, climbing from an estimated $12.6 billion in 2002 to $24.6 billion dollars by 2011, according to a study funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and led by researchers at Milken Institute School of Public Health (Milken Institute SPH) at the George Washington University.
This growth in the value of the tax exemption underscores taxpayer interest in how hospitals allocate their community ...
Better clinical management improves quality of life for neurofibromatosis patients
2015-06-17
MAYWOOD, Ill. - A genetic disorder called neurofibromatosis (NF) causes benign tumors to grow on the brain, spinal cord, and other parts of the nervous system.
There are no effective drugs to prevent or reverse NF. But increasing scientific knowledge has allowed for better clinical management and fewer complications, resulting in a higher quality of life for neurofibromatosis patients, NF specialists report in the Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences.
Pediatric neurologist and NF specialist Nikolas Mata-Machado, MD, of Loyola University Medical Center, ...
Humans' built-in GPS is our 3-D sense of smell
2015-06-17
Like homing pigeons, humans have a nose for navigation because our brains are wired to convert smells into spatial information, new research from the University of California, Berkeley, shows.
While humans may lack the scent-tracking sophistication of, say, a search-and-rescue dog, we can sniff our way, blindfolded, toward a location whose scent we've smelled only once before, according to the UC Berkeley study published today (June 17) in the journal PLOS ONE.
Similar investigations have been conducted on birds and rodents, but this is the first time smell-based navigation ...
Discovery may lead to targeted melanoma therapies
2015-06-17
(New York, June 17, 2015) Melanoma patients with high levels of a protein that controls the expression of pro-growth genes are less likely to survive, according to a study led by researchers at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and published online in the journal Molecular Cell.
The research team found that the protein, called H2A.Z.2, promotes the abnormal growth seen in melanoma cells as they develop into difficult-to-treat tumors. H2A.Z.2 is part of the chromosome structure that packages genes, and has the ability to switch them on off. Having high levels of ...
Tests to gauge genetic risks for prostate cancer now are feasible
2015-06-17
Men with an elevated, genetically inherited risk for prostate cancer could be routinely identified with a simple blood or urine test, scientists at UC San Francisco and Kaiser Permanente Northern California have concluded, potentially paving the way to better or earlier diagnosis.
The study, which compared 7,783 men with prostate cancer to 38,595 men without the disease, is available online and will be published in an upcoming issue of the journal Cancer Discovery.
The new study is one of the first to come out of the collaboration between UCSF and Kaiser Permanente ...
Stanford engineers find a simple yet clever way to boost chip speeds
2015-06-17
A typical computer chip includes millions of transistors connected with an extensive network of copper wires. Although chip wires are unimaginably short and thin compared to household wires both have one thing in common: in each case the copper is wrapped within a protective sheath.
For years a material called tantalum nitride has formed protective layer in chip wires.
Now Stanford-led experiments demonstrate that a different sheathing material, graphene, can help electrons scoot through tiny copper wires in chips more quickly.
Graphene is a single layer of carbon ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Recycled pacemakers function as well as new devices, international study suggests
Researchers eliminate the gritty mouth feel: How to make it easier to eat fiber-rich foods
An innovative antibiotic for drug-resistant bacteria
Garden produce grown near Fayetteville works fluorochemical plant contains GenX, other PFAs
CMU-Africa expands digital public infrastructure initiative across the continent
Study calls for city fashion waste shakeup
Scientists develop breakthrough culture system to unlock secrets of skin microbiome
Masseter muscle volume might be a key indicator of sarcopenia risk in older adults
New study unveils key strategies against drug-resistant prostate cancer
Northwestern Medicine, West Health, Meadows Mental Health Policy Institute collaboration to provide easier access to mental health care
New method reveals DNA methylation in ancient tissues, unlocking secrets of human evolution
Researchers develop clinically validated, wearable ultrasound patch for continuous blood pressure monitoring
Chromatwist wins innovate UK smart grant for £0.5M project
Unlocking the secrets of the first quasars: how they defy the laws of physics to grow
Study reveals importance of student-teacher relationships in early childhood education
Do abortion policy changes affect young women’s mental health?
Can sown wildflowers compensate for cities’ lack of natural meadows to support pollinating insects?
Is therapeutic hypothermia an effective treatment for hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, a type of neurological dysfunction in newborns?
Scientists discover the molecular composition of potentially deadly venomous fish
What are the belowground responses to long-term soil warming among different types of trees?
Do area-wide social and environmental factors affect individuals’ risk of cognitive impairment?
UCLA professor Helen Lavretsky reshapes brain health through integrative medicine research
Astronauts found to process some tasks slower in space, but no signs of permanent cognitive decline
Larger pay increases and better benefits could support teacher retention
Researchers characterize mechanism for regulating orderly zygotic genome activation in early embryos
AI analysis of urine can predict flare up of lung disease a week in advance
New DESI results weigh in on gravity
New DESI data shed light on gravity’s pull in the universe
Boosting WA startups: Report calls for investment in talent, diversity and innovation
New AEM study highlights feasibility of cranial accelerometry device for prehospital detection of large-vessel occlusion stroke
[Press-News.org] Potential downside to domestic surgical tourismStudy suggests patients who continue care with the same physicians and hospitals are less likely to die from post-surgical complications