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Observational Study
Observational Study of the Distribution and Diversity of Interventional Pain Procedures Among Hospitals in the State of Iowa.
- Amy C S Pearson and Franklin Dexter.
- Department of Anesthesia, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa.
- Pain Physician. 2019 May 1; 22 (3): E157-E170.
BackgroundCritical access hospitals represent 61% of hospitals in the rural United States, and 68% of hospitals in Iowa. The role of small hospitals, such as critical access hospitals, in providing interventional chronic pain procedures is unknown.ObjectivesWe evaluated whether: a) the diversity of interventional pain procedures offered by hospitals is related to their size and is attributable principally to lumbosacral epidural injections; b) critical access hospitals contribute substantively to the count and diversity of pain procedures; and c) whether most interventional pain procedures performed at hospitals' facilities are performed by relatively few proceduralists or by the cumulative activity of many clinicians.Study DesignThis research involved an observational cohort design with a sample size of n = 283,940 interventional pain procedures.SettingData were collected from hospital-owned facilities in the state of Iowa from July 2012 through September 2017.MethodsThe diversity of types of interventional pain procedures performed statewide was quantified in terms of the relative proportions of procedures at each hospital using the Herfindahl index. Bilinear weighted least squares regression quantified the relationship between the inverse of the Herfindahl and the percentage of procedures that were lumbar or caudal epidural. Kendall tau concordances quantified the relationship between counts of interventional pain procedures and hospital size. Using a blinded version of the National Provider Identifier of the clinician with primary responsibility for performing the principal procedure of the ambulatory visit, we calculated the percentage shares of interventional pain procedures performed by the 1% and 5% of proceduralists who performed the most procedures.ResultsThe diversity of types of procedures substantively differentiated among hospitals. Heterogeneity among hospitals in the proportion of procedures that were lumbar or caudal epidural injections substantively contributed to the heterogeneity among hospitals (P < .001). Hospitals performing more procedures tended to have greater diversity of types of procedures (P < .001). However, the strength of the concordance was small (Kendall tau b = 0.332), showing substantial heterogeneity among hospitals. The 82 critical access hospitals statewide cumulatively accounted for 23.9% of interventional pain procedures. The critical access hospitals' procedures were mostly (67.7%) lumbar or caudal epidural injections (P < .001), greater than the 48.9% of the other 41 hospitals (P < .001). Procedures were concentrated among proceduralists. The 1.0% of the proceduralists performing the most procedures performed 64.8% of procedures. The 5.0% of proceduralists performing the most procedures performed 87.7% of procedures.LimitationsThe data are procedures were performed in hospital-owned facilities of Iowa.ConclusionsAlthough busier pain programs, based on procedures per week, generally performed more types of procedures, the variability was so large that the number of procedures a pain program performs per week cannot validly be used to infer the diversity of the hospital's pain medicine practice. Hospitals with pain medicine programs that lack diversity in the types of procedures performed may provide limited options for patients and be susceptible to changes in payment for individual procedures. Relatively few proceduralists performed the vast majority of the procedures.Key WordsCritical access hospitals, Herfindahl, interventional pain procedures, managerial epidemiology, pain medicine, state outpatient procedure database, lumbar epidural.
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