PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Hospitals performing expensive heart procedures are more costly for all patients

2012-05-11
(Press-News.org) Hospitals that perform expensive, invasive cardiovascular procedures on a disproportionate number of patients are more costly for all heart failure patients, including those treated with noninvasive methods, according to a new Yale study.

Most heart failure patients are cared for without the use of invasive procedures like cardiac catheterization, notes the study published in Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes; but the rates of invasive procedures used for heart failure patients vary across hospitals. The study authors represent the NIH Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Center for Cardiovascular Outcomes Research (CCOR) at Yale University as well as the Yale University School of Medicine and Baystate Medical Center.

The authors found that patients who were hospitalized with a diagnosis of heart failure and who did not receive an invasive procedure had a median cost per hospitalization of $5,259 at hospitals that performed few invasive procedures, but their median cost was $6,965 at hospitals that do many invasive procedures. This cost difference was not explained by the length of stay and was not attributable to higher spending in any one area such as laboratory testing, diagnostic imaging, or medication use. Rather, length of stay was similar between groups, and spending at high-procedure hospitals was higher in most categories.

"This study highlights that the high cost of high-procedure hospitals is not only the result of doing more invasive procedures," said lead author Serene I. Chen. "Instead, it may be that hospitals that have an intensive style of practice — those that do more procedures — also do more of everything else, such as imaging studies, medication administration, and laboratory testing, even for heart failure patients who are medically managed."

The investigators reported that hospitals that performed fewer invasive procedures tended to be smaller, non-teaching institutions, whereas those that performed a higher volume of invasive procedures tended to be urban teaching hospitals that cared for a higher volume of heart failure patients.

Chen, a second-year student at the Yale University School of Medicine, has been nominated for an American Heart Association's Quality of Care and Outcomes Research (QCOR) Young Investigator Abstract Award, and the publication of the paper "Procedure Intensity and the Cost of Care" is timed to coincide with her presentation at the QCOR meeting.

###

Funding for this project was provided by the Patrick and Catherine Weldon Donaghue Medical Research Foundation.

Additional authors on the study include Kumar Dharmarajan, Nancy Kim, Kelly M. Strait, Shu-Xia Li, Kyan C. Safavi, Peter K. Lindenauer, Harlan M. Krumholz, and Tara Lagu.

DOI: 10.1161/CIRCOUTCOMES.112.966069

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Improved survival rates for mitral valve heart surgery patients

2012-05-11
Patients with mitral regurgitation, a type of valvular heart disease common in the elderly, are living longer after surgery, Yale School of Medicine researchers report in the journal Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes. Surgery that replaces or repairs the mitral valve remains the definitive therapy for symptomatic mitral regurgitation, but surgery carries considerable risks of mortality and complications such as infection and renal failure. Led by John A. Dodson, M.D., a postdoctoral fellow in cardiology and geriatrics at Yale School of Medicine, the researchers ...

Caltech researchers gain greater insight into earthquake cycles

Caltech researchers gain greater insight into earthquake cycles
2012-05-11
PASADENA, Calif.—For those who study earthquakes, one major challenge has been trying to understand all the physics of a fault—both during an earthquake and at times of "rest"—in order to know more about how a particular region may behave in the future. Now, researchers at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) have developed the first computer model of an earthquake-producing fault segment that reproduces, in a single physical framework, the available observations of both the fault's seismic (fast) and aseismic (slow) behavior. "Our study describes a methodology ...

Obesity and the biological clock

2012-05-11
Urgent appointments, tight work timetables and hectic social schedules structure modern life, and they very often clash with our intrinsic biological rhythms. The discrepancy results in so-called social jetlag, which can damage one's health. Among other effects, it can contribute to the development of obesity, as a new LMU study shows. Three temporal cycles shape our lives. Our biological clock ensures that fundamental physiological processes oscillate with a period of approximately 24 hours. This internal timekeeper used the daily succession of light and dark to synchronize ...

Scientists identify protein that stimulates brown fat to burn calories

2012-05-11
Scientists have identified a protein which regulates the activation of brown fat in both the brain and the body's tissues. Their research, which was conducted in mice, was published today, Friday 11 May, in the journal Cell. Unlike white fat, which functions primarily to store up fat, brown fat (also known as brown adipose tissue) burns fats to generate heat in a process known as thermogenesis. The research, led by scientists at the University of Cambridge Metabolic Research Laboratories at the Institute of Metabolic Science, discovered that the protein BMP8B acts on ...

Never Tilt Your Head at the Library or Bookstore Again with ShelfLook, Azymous Interactive's New iPhone App

2012-05-11
Patrons tilting heads and crouching up and down at libraries and bookstores are a familiar sight. Azymous Interactive's new ShelfLook iPhone app may change that landscape forever, as users no longer have to bend or twist to view book titles. Using ShelfLook is exceptionally simple. Users just launch the ShelfLook app, hold the iPhone horizontally, and look through the screen. Book titles that were once hard to read are now easily read horizontally on the screen. For low light environments, ShelfLook conveniently provides enhanced lighting at the push of a button. When ...

Researchers at the RUB and from Taiwan discover energy supply for protein secretion

2012-05-11
In order to interact with the environment, bacteria secrete a whole arsenal of proteins. Researchers have now found how one of the transportation systems used for this purpose – the type VI secretion system – works for the single-celled organism Agrobacterium tumefaciens. They have identified the relevant transport proteins and their energy suppliers. With colleagues at the Academia Sinica in Taiwan, RUB biologist Prof. Dr. Franz Narberhaus describes the findings in the Journal of Biological Chemistry. "The proteins involved also occur in other secretion apparatuses" explains ...

A&A special feature: Early results of the GREAT instrument onboard the SOFIA airborne observatory

2012-05-11
Astronomy & Astrophysics is publishing a special feature devoted to the early results obtained during the first science flights of the airborne observatory SOFIA [1] with the GREAT far-infrared instrument [2]. We present 22 articles reporting on the technologies and the early astronomical results (including the first ever detection of new interstellar molecules). Developed on the legacy of the Kuiper Airborne Observatory, which flew from 1974 to 1995, SOFIA performed its first science flight by the end of 2010, after a series of characterization flights. SOFIA flies ...

Language diversity will make London a true global player

2012-05-11
Understanding linguistic diversity among London's schoolchildren is key for the city's future as a 'global player', research shows. A study funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) mapped the distribution of languages spoken by London state school pupils. By combining language spoken with ethnicity, researchers have shed new light on patterns of educational inequality. "London's increasing language diversity attracts much interest and debate among public service providers, educationalists and the public. Yet little was known about the numbers of people ...

Former Star BBC's Dragons' Den to Keynote at 7 Graces Global Conference for Ethical Marketing, Business Ethics, Corporate Responsibility and Sustainability

Former Star BBCs Dragons Den to Keynote at 7 Graces Global Conference for Ethical Marketing, Business Ethics, Corporate Responsibility and Sustainability
2012-05-11
From June 22nd through 24th, 2012, London will be the site of the first 7 Graces Global Conference (7GGC), bringing together hundreds of participants wishing to express their commitment to business ethics, corporate responsibility, social wellbeing and environmental sustainability (http://the7gracesofmarketing.com/7GGC) The 3-day conference will take place on Friday June 22nd through Sunday 24th, 2012, at The Window, 13 Windsor Street, London, N1 8QG, United Kingdom. To encourage as many people for around the world to attend without increasing their carbon footprint, ...

University of Leicester study identifies key cellular mechanisms behind the onset of tinnitus

2012-05-11
Researchers in the University of Leicester's Department of Cell Physiology and Pharmacology have identified a cellular mechanism that could underlie the development of tinnitus following exposure to loud noises. The discovery could lead to novel tinnitus treatments, and investigations into potential drugs to prevent tinnitus are currently underway. Tinnitus is a sensation of phantom sounds, usually ringing or buzzing, heard in the ears when no external noise is present. It commonly develops after exposure to loud noises (acoustic over-exposure), and scientists have speculated ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Pathway to residency program helps kids and the pediatrician shortage

How the color of a theater affects sound perception

Ensuring smartphones have not been tampered with

Overdiagnosis of papillary thyroid cancer

Association of dual eligibility and medicare type with quality of postacute care after stroke

Shine a light, build a crystal

AI-powered platform accelerates discovery of new mRNA delivery materials

Quantum effect could power the next generation of battery-free devices

New research finds heart health benefits in combining mango and avocado daily

New research finds peanut butter consumption builds muscle power in older adults

Study identifies aging-associated mitochondrial circular RNAs

The brain’s primitive ‘fear center’ is actually a sophisticated mediator

Brain Healthy Campus Collaborative announces winner of first-ever Brain Health Prize

Tokyo Bay’s night lights reveal hidden boundaries between species

As worms and jellyfish wriggle, new AI tools track their neurons

ATG14 identified as a central guardian against liver injury and fibrosis

Research identifies blind spots in AI medical triage

$9M for exploring the fundamental limits of entangled quantum sensor networks

Study shows marine plastic pollution alters octopus predator-prey encounters

Night lights can structure ecosystems

A parasitic origin for the ribosome?

A gold-standard survey of the American mood

Tool for identifying children at risk of speech disorders

How Japanese medical trainees view artificial intelligence in medicine

MambaAlign fusion framework for detecting defects missed by inspection systems

Children born with upper limb difference show the incredible adaptability of the young brain

How bacteria can reclaim lost energy, nutrients, and clean water from wastewater

Fast-paced lives demand faster vision: ecology shapes how “quickly” animals see time

Global warming and heat stress risk close in on the Tour de France

New technology reveals hidden DNA scaffolding built before life ‘switches on’

[Press-News.org] Hospitals performing expensive heart procedures are more costly for all patients