• Annals of surgery · Feb 2024

    Detecting Variation in Clinical Practice Patterns for Geriatric Trauma Care Using Social Network Analysis.

    • Molly P Jarman, Mengyuan Ruan, Masami Tabata-Kelly, Brea L Perry, Byungkyu Lee, Malaz Boustani, and Zara Cooper.
    • Center for Surgery and Public Health, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA.
    • Ann. Surg. 2024 Feb 1; 279 (2): 353360353-360.

    ObjectiveTo characterize hospital-level professional networks of physicians caring for older trauma patients as a function of trauma patient age distribution.BackgroundThe causal factors associated with between-hospital variation in geriatric trauma outcomes are poorly understood. Variation in physician practice patterns reflected by differences in professional networks might contribute to hospital-level differences in outcomes for older trauma patients.MethodsThis is a population-based, cross-sectional study of injured older adults (age 65 or above) and their physicians from January 1, 2014, to December 31, 2015, using Health Care Cost and Utilization Project inpatient data and Medicare claims from 158 hospitals in Florida. We used social network analyses to characterize the hospitals in terms of network density, cohesion, small-worldness, and heterogeneity, then used bivariate statistics to assess the relationship between network characteristics and hospital-level proportion of trauma patients who were aged 65 or above.ResultsWe identified 107,713 older trauma patients and 169,282 patient-physician dyads. The hospital-level proportion of trauma patients who were aged 65 or above ranged from 21.5% to 89.1%. Network density, cohesion, and small-worldness in physician networks were positively correlated with hospital geriatric trauma proportions ( R =0.29, P <0.001; R =0.16, P =0.048; and R =0.19, P <0.001, respectively). Network heterogeneity was negatively correlated with geriatric trauma proportion ( R =0.40, P <0.001).ConclusionsCharacteristics of professional networks among physicians caring for injured older adults are associated with the hospital-level proportion of trauma patients who are older, indicating differences in practice patterns at hospitals with older trauma populations. Associations between interspecialty collaboration and patient outcomes should be explored as an opportunity to improve the treatment of injured older adults.Copyright © 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

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