Volume 53 | Number 4 | August 2018

Abstract List

Mauro Laudicella Ph.D., Stephen Martin Ph.D., Paolo Li Donni Ph.D., Peter C. Smith M.A.


Objectives

To measure the impact of the improvement in hospital survival rates on patients’ subsequent utilization of unplanned (emergency) admissions.


Data Sources/Study Setting

Unplanned admissions occurring in all acute hospitals of the National Health Service in England between 2000 and 2009, including 286,027 hip fractures, 375,880 , 387,761 strokes, and 9,966,246 any cause admissions.


Study Design

Population‐based retrospective cohort study. Unplanned admissions experienced by patients within 28 days, 1 year, and 2 years of discharge from the index admission are modeled as a function of hospital risk‐adjusted survival rates using patient‐level probit and negative binomial models. Identification is also supported by an instrumental variable approach and placebo test.


Principal Findings

The improvement in hospital survival rates that occurred between 2000 and 2009 explains 37.3 percent of the total increment in unplanned admissions observed over the same period. One extra patient surviving increases the expected number of subsequent admissions occurring within 1 year from discharge by 1.9 admissions for every 100 index admissions (0.019 per admission, 95% , 0.016–0.022). Similar results in hip fracture (0.006[0.004–0.007]), (0.006[0.04–0.007]), and stroke (0.004(0.003–0.005)).


Conclusions

The success of hospitals in improving survival from unplanned admissions can be an important contributory factor to the increase in subsequent admissions.