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- Lewis Rubinson, Ryan Mutter, Cecile Viboud, Nathaniel Hupert, Timothy Uyeki, Andreea Creanga, Lyn Finelli, Theodore J Iwashyna, Brendan Carr, Raina Merchant, Devi Katikineni, Frances Vaughn, Carolyn Clancy, and Nicole Lurie.
- Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response, Department of Health and Human Services, Washington, DC, USA.
- Med Care. 2013 Mar 1;51(3):259-65.
BackgroundUnderstanding how hospitals functioned during the 2009 influenza A(H1N1)pdm09 pandemic may improve future public health emergency response, but information about its impact on US hospitals remains largely unknown.Research DesignWe matched hospital and emergency department (ED) discharge data from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project with community-level influenza-like illness activity during each hospital's pandemic period in fall 2009 compared with a corresponding calendar baseline period. We compared inpatient mortality for sentinel conditions at high-surge versus nonsurge hospitals.ResultsUS hospitals experienced a doubling of pneumonia and influenza ED visits during fall 2009 compared with prior years, along with an 18% increase in overall ED visits. Although no significant increase in total inpatient admissions occurred overall, approximately 10% of all study hospitals experienced high surge, associated with higher acute myocardial infarction and stroke case fatality rates. These hospitals had similar characteristics to other US hospitals except that they had higher mortality for acute cardiac illnesses before the pandemic. After adjusting for 2008 case fatality rates, the association between high-surge hospitals and increased mortality for acute myocardial infarction and stroke patients persisted.ConclusionsThe fall 2009 pandemic period substantially impacted US hospitals, mostly through increased ED visits. For a small proportion of hospitals that experienced a high surge in inpatient admissions, increased mortality from selected clinical conditions was associated with both prepandemic outcomes and surge, highlighting the linkage between daily hospital operations and disaster preparedness.
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