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McGee Koefoed posted an update 6 months ago
The Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) is a federal law enacted in 1986 prohibiting patient dumping (refusing or transferring patients with emergency medical conditions without appropriate stabilization), and discrimination based upon ability to pay. We evaluate hospital-level features associated with citation for EMTALA violation.
A retrospective analysis of observational data on EMTALA enforcement (2005-2013). Regression analysis evaluates the association between facility-level features and odds of EMTALA citation by hospital-year.
Among 4916 EMTALA-obligated hospitals there were 1925 EMTALA citation events at 1413 facilities between 2005 and 2013, with 4.3% of hospitals cited per year. In adjusted analyses, increased odds of EMTALA citations were found at hospitals that were for-profit , in metropolitan areas (OR 1.32; 95% CI 1.11-1.57); that admitted a higher proportion of Medicaid patients (OR 1.01; 95% CI 1.0-1.01); and cess to emergency care for vulnerable populations, particularly at large, urban, for-profit hospitals admitting high proportions of Medicaid patients.
Patients with prolonged hospitalizations account for 14% of all hospital days in US hospitals. Predicting which medical patients are at risk for prolonged hospitalizations would allow early proactive management to reduce their length of stay.
Using the National Inpatient Sample, we examined risk factors for prolonged hospitalizations among adults hospitalized on the medicine service in 2014. We defined prolonged hospitalizations as those lasting 21 days or longer. We divided the sample into derivation and validation sets, and used logistic regression to identify significant risk factors in the derivation set, which were validated in the validation set. We used the estimates from the model to derive a risk score for prolonged hospitalizations.
Our sample included 2,997,249 hospitalizations (median age of 66 y, 53.5% female). 1.2% of hospitalizations were 21 days or longer. Patients with prolonged hospitalizations were younger, and had a greater number of chronic diseases. A prolonged hospitalization riskms to reduce length of stay.
To estimate the average incremental health care expenditures associated with habitual long and short duration of sleep as compared with healthy/average sleep duration.
Medical Expenditure Panel Survey data (2012; N=6476) linked to the 2010-2011 National Health Interview Survey.
Annual differences in health care expenditures are estimated for habitual long and short duration sleepers as compared with average duration sleepers using 2-part logit generalized linear regression models.
Habitual short duration sleepers reported an additional $1400 in total unadjusted health care expenditures compared to people with average sleep duration (P<0.01). After adjusting for demographics, socioeconomic factors, and health behavior factors, this difference remained significant with an additional $1278 in total health care expenditures over average duration sleepers (P<0.05). Long duration sleepers reported even higher, $2994 additional health care expenditures over average duration sleepers. This difference in health care expenditures remained significantly high ($1500, P<0.01) in the adjusted model. read more Expenditure differences are more pronounced for inpatient hospitalization, office expenses, prescription expenses, and home health care expenditures.
Habitual short and long sleep duration is associated with higher health care expenditures, which is consistent with the association between unhealthy sleep duration and poorer health outcomes.
Habitual short and long sleep duration is associated with higher health care expenditures, which is consistent with the association between unhealthy sleep duration and poorer health outcomes.
The majority of endovascular interventions for trauma are performed using transfemoral access (TFA). Transradial access (TRA) is a recently integrated alternative at the authors’ institution. This noninferiority study compares the technical success and complication rate of TRA compared with TFA.
All patients undergoing emergent endovascular interventions between March 2016 and March 2019 were identified from a prospectively maintained database. Data were collected on access type, complications, and procedural success. A noninferiority margin was established from previous randomized trials for technical success (0.475) and complications (0.015).
Over 3 years, 96 patients underwent TRA and 335 patients received TFA. The overall technical success rate was 98.1%, without significance based on access strategy (p = 0.078). All femoral arteries and 97.9% (n = 94) of radial arteries were accessed as intended. Complications occurred in 1.0% of TRA and 9.9% of TFA groups (p = 0.002). In the TFA group, complications included access site bleeding, hematoma, pseudoaneurysm, lower limb ischemia, and femoral artery thrombosis (n = 6, 14, 3, 3, and 4, respectively). In the TRA group, complications included radial artery thrombosis (n = 1). Transradial access procedural success and complication rate fell within the lower bound confidence interval of the noninferiority margin, demonstrated the noninferiority of TRA in this data set.
Transradial access in a cohort of trauma patients undergoing endovascular intervention does not appear to be inferior to TFA in relation to technical success and complications. For patients where groin access may be challenging, TRA is a useful, efficacious, and safe alternative. Longer-term study is required to fully characterize the advantages and disadvantages of TRA compared with TFA.
Therapeutic V.
Therapeutic V.
Patients undergoing orthognathic skeletal correction present with a variety of comorbidities that may affect surgical outcomes. The purpose of this study was to determine how patient risk factors and operative technique contribute to complication rates after orthognathic surgery in the era of patient-specific implants.
Retrospective cohort analysis was conducted of pediatric patients undergoing Le Fort I osteotomy, bilateral sagittal split osteotomy, and/or genioplasty from 2014 to 2018. Patient risk factors, operative characteristics, and postoperative outcomes were gathered and compared with appropriate statistics.
Ninety-four patients met inclusion criteria, with an overall 1-year complication rate of 11.7 percent (11 of 94). Patient-specific mandibular plates are significantly associated with infection (p = 0.009; OR, 8.8), occurrence of any complication (p = 0.003; OR, 8.3), readmission (p < 0.001; OR, 11.1), and reoperation (p < 0.001; OR, 11.4). In patients with syndromes or history of cleft lip/palate, patient-specific mandibular plates are associated with infection (p = 0.