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Should Operations Be Regionalized?

1.8K

Citations

7

References

1979

Year

TLDR

The study investigates whether hospital surgical volume is associated with mortality. It analyzes mortality rates for 12 procedures across 1498 hospitals. Results show that for several high‑complexity procedures, higher surgical volume is linked to markedly lower mortality—up to 41% lower in high‑volume hospitals—while for other procedures the benefit plateaus or is absent, supporting regionalization for selected operations.

Abstract

This study examines mortality rates for 12 surgical procedures of varying complexity in 1498 hospitals to determine whether there is a relation between a hospital's surgical volume and its surgical mortality. The mortality of open-heart surgery, vascular surgery, transurethral resection of the prostate, and coronary bypass decreased with increasing number of operations. Hospitals in which 200 or more of these operations were done annually had death rates, adjusted for case mix, 25 to 41 per cent lower than hospitals with lower volumes. For other procedures, the mortality curve flattened at lower volumes. For example, hospitals doing 50 to 100 total hip replacements attained a mortality rate for this procedure almost as low as that of hospitals doing 200 or more. Some procedures, such as cholecystectomy, showed no relation between volume and mortality. The results may reflect the effect of volume or experience on mortality, or referrals to institutions with better outcomes, as well as a number of other factors, such as patient selection. Regardless of the explanation, these data support the value of regionalization for certain operations.

References

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