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- Raina M Merchant, Lin Yang, Lance B Becker, Robert A Berg, Vinay Nadkarni, Graham Nichol, Brendan G Carr, Nandita Mitra, Steven M Bradley, Benjamin S Abella, Peter W Groeneveld, and American Heart Association Get With the Guideline-Resuscitation Investigators.
- Department of Emergency Medicine, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. raina.merchant@uphs.upenn.edu
- Med Care. 2012 Feb 1;50(2):124-30.
BackgroundIt is unknown how in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) rates vary across hospitals and predictors of variability.ObjectivesMeasure variability in IHCA across hospitals and determine if hospital-level factors predict differences in case-mix adjusted event rates.Research DesignGet with the Guidelines Resuscitation (GWTG-R) (n=433 hospitals) was used to identify IHCA events between 2003 and 2007. The American Hospital Association survey, Medicare, and US Census were used to obtain detailed information about GWTG-R hospitals.ParticipantsAdult patients with IHCA.MeasuresCase-mix-adjusted predicted IHCA rates were calculated for each hospital and variability across hospitals was compared. A regression model was used to predict case-mix adjusted event rates using hospital measures of volume, nurse-to-bed ratio, percent intensive care unit beds, palliative care services, urban designation, volume of black patients, income, trauma designation, academic designation, cardiac surgery capability, and a patient risk score.ResultsWe evaluated 103,117 adult IHCAs at 433 US hospitals. The case-mix adjusted IHCA event rate was highly variable across hospitals, median 1/1000 bed days (interquartile range: 0.7 to 1.3 events/1000 bed days). In a multivariable regression model, case-mix adjusted IHCA event rates were highest in urban hospitals [rate ratio (RR), 1.1; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.0-1.3; P=0.03] and hospitals with higher proportions of black patients (RR, 1.2; 95% CI, 1.0-1.3; P=0.01) and lower in larger hospitals (RR, 0.54; 95% CI, 0.45-0.66; P<0.0001).ConclusionsCase-mix adjusted IHCA event rates varied considerably across hospitals. Several hospital factors associated with higher IHCA event rates were consistent with factors often linked with lower hospital quality of care.
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