Evidence of racial and geographic disparities in the use of medicare observation stays and subsequent patient outcomes relative to short-stay hospitalizations
To examine racial and geographic disparities in the use of-and outcomes associated with-Medicare observation stays versus short-stay hospitalizations.\nWe used 2007-2010 fee-for-service Medicare claims, including 3,555,994 observation and short-stay hospitalizations for individuals over age 65. We e...
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sg-smu-ink.soe_research-33242020-01-02T06:53:53Z Evidence of racial and geographic disparities in the use of medicare observation stays and subsequent patient outcomes relative to short-stay hospitalizations WRIGHT, Brad ZHANG, Xuan RAHMAN, Momotazur ABIR, Mahshid AYYAGARI, Padmaja KOCHER, Keith E. To examine racial and geographic disparities in the use of-and outcomes associated with-Medicare observation stays versus short-stay hospitalizations.\nWe used 2007-2010 fee-for-service Medicare claims, including 3,555,994 observation and short-stay hospitalizations for individuals over age 65. We estimated linear probability models with hospital fixed effects to identify within-facility disparities in observation stay use, and estimated in-hospital mortality, and 30- and 90-day post-discharge mortality, return ED visits, and hospital readmissions as a function of placement in observation using linear probability models, propensity-score matching, and interaction terms.\nWe identified racial and geographic disparities in the likelihood of observation stay use within hospitals (blacks 3.9 percentage points more likely than whites, rural 5.4 percentage points less likely than urban). Observation is associated with an increased likelihood of returning to the ED within 30 or 90-days, and a decreased likelihood of readmission or mortality, but there are racial and geographic disparities in these outcomes.\nWhile observation generally results in improved outcomes, disparities in these outcomes and the use of observation stays within hospitals are concerning, and may be driven by clinical and non-clinical factors.\nPurpose\nMethods\nResults\nConclusion 2018-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soe_research/2325 info:doi/10.1089/heq.2017.0055 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soe_research/article/3324/viewcontent/HEquity_2018.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School Of Economics eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Health Economics |
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Health Economics WRIGHT, Brad ZHANG, Xuan RAHMAN, Momotazur ABIR, Mahshid AYYAGARI, Padmaja KOCHER, Keith E. Evidence of racial and geographic disparities in the use of medicare observation stays and subsequent patient outcomes relative to short-stay hospitalizations |
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To examine racial and geographic disparities in the use of-and outcomes associated with-Medicare observation stays versus short-stay hospitalizations.\nWe used 2007-2010 fee-for-service Medicare claims, including 3,555,994 observation and short-stay hospitalizations for individuals over age 65. We estimated linear probability models with hospital fixed effects to identify within-facility disparities in observation stay use, and estimated in-hospital mortality, and 30- and 90-day post-discharge mortality, return ED visits, and hospital readmissions as a function of placement in observation using linear probability models, propensity-score matching, and interaction terms.\nWe identified racial and geographic disparities in the likelihood of observation stay use within hospitals (blacks 3.9 percentage points more likely than whites, rural 5.4 percentage points less likely than urban). Observation is associated with an increased likelihood of returning to the ED within 30 or 90-days, and a decreased likelihood of readmission or mortality, but there are racial and geographic disparities in these outcomes.\nWhile observation generally results in improved outcomes, disparities in these outcomes and the use of observation stays within hospitals are concerning, and may be driven by clinical and non-clinical factors.\nPurpose\nMethods\nResults\nConclusion |
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WRIGHT, Brad ZHANG, Xuan RAHMAN, Momotazur ABIR, Mahshid AYYAGARI, Padmaja KOCHER, Keith E. |
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WRIGHT, Brad ZHANG, Xuan RAHMAN, Momotazur ABIR, Mahshid AYYAGARI, Padmaja KOCHER, Keith E. |
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WRIGHT, Brad |
title |
Evidence of racial and geographic disparities in the use of medicare observation stays and subsequent patient outcomes relative to short-stay hospitalizations |
title_short |
Evidence of racial and geographic disparities in the use of medicare observation stays and subsequent patient outcomes relative to short-stay hospitalizations |
title_full |
Evidence of racial and geographic disparities in the use of medicare observation stays and subsequent patient outcomes relative to short-stay hospitalizations |
title_fullStr |
Evidence of racial and geographic disparities in the use of medicare observation stays and subsequent patient outcomes relative to short-stay hospitalizations |
title_full_unstemmed |
Evidence of racial and geographic disparities in the use of medicare observation stays and subsequent patient outcomes relative to short-stay hospitalizations |
title_sort |
evidence of racial and geographic disparities in the use of medicare observation stays and subsequent patient outcomes relative to short-stay hospitalizations |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2018 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soe_research/2325 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soe_research/article/3324/viewcontent/HEquity_2018.pdf |
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