188 results on '"Phibbs CS"'
Search Results
2. Women's prepregnancy underweight as a risk factor for preterm birth: a retrospective study.
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Girsen, AI, Mayo, JA, Carmichael, SL, Phibbs, CS, Shachar, BZ, Stevenson, DK, Lyell, DJ, Shaw, GM, and Gould, JB
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PREMATURE labor ,HEALTH of mothers ,BODY weight ,GESTATIONAL age ,PREGNANCY ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PREMATURE infants ,LEANNESS ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,EVALUATION research ,BODY mass index ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,SEVERITY of illness index ,PARITY (Obstetrics) - Abstract
Objective: To investigate the distribution of known factors for preterm birth (PTB) by severity of maternal underweight; to investigate the risk-adjusted relation between severity of underweight and PTB, and to assess whether the relation differed by gestational age.Design: Retrospective cohort study.Setting: State of California, USA.Methods: Maternally linked hospital and birth certificate records of 950 356 California deliveries in 2007-2010 were analysed. Singleton live births of women whose prepregnancy body mass index (BMI) was underweight (<18.5 kg/m2 ) or normal (18.50-24.99 kg/m2 ) were analysed. Underweight BMI was further categorised as: severe (<16.00), moderate (16.00-16.99) or mild (17.00-18.49). PTB was grouped as 22-27, 28-31, 32-36 or <37 weeks (compared with 37-41 weeks). Adjusted multivariable Poisson regression modeling was used to estimate relative risk for PTB.Main Outcome Measures: Risk of PTB.Results: About 72 686 (7.6%) women were underweight. Increasing severity of underweight was associated with increasing percent PTB: 7.8% (n = 4421) in mild, 9.0% (n = 1001) in moderate and 10.2% (475) in severe underweight. The adjusted relative risk of PTB also significantly increased: adjusted relative risk (aRR) = 1.22 (95% CI 1.19-1.26) in mild, aRR = 1.41 (95% CI 1.32-1.50) in moderate and aRR = 1.61 (95% CI 1.47-1.76) in severe underweight. These findings were similar in spontaneous PTB, medically indicated PTB, and the gestational age groupings.Conclusion: Increasing severity of maternal prepregnancy underweight BMI was associated with increasing risk-adjusted PTB at <37 weeks. This increasing risk was of similar magnitude in spontaneous and medically indicated births and in preterm delivery at 28-31 and at 32-36 weeks of gestation.Tweetable Abstract: Increasing severity of maternal underweight BMI was associated with increasing risk of preterm birth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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3. The effect of neonatal intensive care level and hospital volume on mortality of very low birth weight infants.
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Chung JH, Phibbs CS, Boscardin WJ, Kominski GF, Ortega AN, and Needleman J
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- 2010
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4. Gender disparities in Veterans Health Administration care: importance of accounting for veteran status.
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Frayne SM, Yano EM, Nguyen VQ, Yu W, Ananth L, Chiu VY, and Phibbs CS
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- 2008
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5. Level and volume of neonatal intensive care and mortality in very-low-birth-weight infants.
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Phibbs CS, Baker LC, Caughey AB, Danielsen B, Schmitt SK, and Phibbs RH
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- 2007
6. Differences in neonatal mortality among whites and Asian American subgroups: evidence from California.
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Baker LC, Afendulis CC, Chandra A, McConville S, Phibbs CS, and Fuentes-Afflick E
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- 2007
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7. The effect of geriatrics evaluation and management on nursing home use and health care costs: results from a randomized trial.
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Phibbs CS, Holty JC, Goldstein MK, Garber AM, Wang Y, Feussner JR, Cohen HJ, Phibbs, Ciaran S, Holty, Jon-Erik C, Goldstein, Mary K, Garber, Alan M, Wang, Yajie, Feussner, John R, and Cohen, Harvey J
- Abstract
Background: The Geriatric Evaluation and Management study was developed to assess the impact of a comprehensive geriatric assessment service on the care of the elderly.Objectives: We sought to evaluate the cost and clinical impact of inpatient units and outpatient clinics for geriatric evaluation and management.Research Design: We undertook a prospective, randomized, controlled trial using a 2x2 factorial design, with 1-year follow-up.Subjects: A total of 1388 participants hospitalized on either a medical or surgical ward at 11 participating Veterans Affairs medical centers were randomized to receive either inpatient geriatric unit (GEMU) or usual inpatient care (UCIP), followed by either outpatient care from a geriatric clinic (GEMC) versus usual outpatient care (UCOP).Measures: We measured health care utilization and costs.Results: Patients assigned to the GEMU had a significantly decreased rate of nursing home placement (odds ratio=0.65; P=0.001). Neither the GEMU nor GEMC had any statistically significant improvement effects on survival and only modest effects on health status. There were statistically insignificant mean cost savings of $1027 (P=0.29) per patient for the GEMU and $1665 (P=0.69) per patient for the GEMC.Conclusions: Inpatient or outpatient geriatric evaluation and management units didn't increase the costs of care. Although there was no effect on survival and only modest effects on SF-36 scores at 1-year follow-up, there was a statistically significant reduction in nursing home admissions for patients treated in the GEMU. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2006
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8. Prenatal care needs assessment comparing service use and outcomes in Fresno, CA.
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Korenbrot CC, Simpson L, and Phibbs CS
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The authors performed a prenatal care needs assessment for Fresno County, CA, using data from a sample of 11,878 birth certificates for the county for 1989. Birth records, patterns of prenatal care utilization, and low birth weight outcomes in the county were compared with those in a random sample of 11,826 certificates derived from births in the remainder of the State. Bivariate techniques were used in calculating care utilization rates. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was used in associating rates of prenatal care visits and gestational month of initiation of prenatal care with low weight birth outcomes. County women entered prenatal care as early as women in the remainder of the State, but did not return as often for prenatal care visits. Their rate of return for followup visits was 29.9 percent, compared with 24.8 percent for women in all other counties (P < 0.001). County women with the lowest rates of visits had 1.4 to 1.9 times the risk of having a low weight birth than other county women with higher rates of visits, and a significantly higher risk than for women of all other counties. An intensive visit schedule for high-risk care was provided 28.9 percent of county women, compared with 33.0 percent of women in all other counties (P < 0.001). County women who received a high-risk intensive visit schedule were 2.5 times more likely to have a low weight birth than county women who did not receive the schedule. For all other women in the State, the comparable risk was 2.1 times. Improvements in the number and content of prenatal care visits were shown to have a high likelihood of substantially improving birth weight outcomes for pregnancies among Fresno County women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1994
9. Mortality in low birth weight infants according to level of neonatal care at hospital of birth.
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Clark RH, Cifuentes J, Bronstein J, Phibbs CS, Schmitt SK, Phibbs RH, and Carlo WA
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- 2003
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10. Readmission for neonatal jaundice in California, 1991-2000: trends and implications [corrected] [published erratum appears in PEDIATRICS 2008 Sep;122(3):690].
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Burgos AE, Schmitt SK, Stevenson DK, and Phibbs CS
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- 2008
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11. Effect of opening midlevel neonatal intensive care units on the location of low birth weight births in California.
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Haberland CA, Phibbs CS, and Baker LC
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OBJECTIVE: Despite evidence and recommendations encouraging the delivery of high-risk newborns in hospitals with subspecialty or high-level NICUs, increasing numbers are being delivered in other facilities. Causes for this are unknown. We sought to explore the impact of diffusion of specialty or midlevel NICUs on the types of hospitals in which low birth weight newborns are born. DESIGN: We used birth certificate, death certificate, and hospital discharge data for essentially all low birth weight, singleton California newborns born between 1993 and 2000. We identified areas likely to have been affected by the opening of a new nearby midlevel unit, analyzed changes over time in the share of births that took place in midlevel NICU hospitals, and compared patterns in areas that were and were not likely affected by the opening of a new midlevel unit. We also tracked the corresponding changes in the share of births in high-level hospitals and in those without NICU facilities (low-level). RESULTS: The probability of a 500- to 1499-g infant being born in a midlevel unit increased by 17 percentage points after the opening of a new nearby unit. More than three quarters of this increase was accounted for by reductions in the probability of birth in a hospital with a high-level unit (-15 points), and the other portion was resulting from reductions in the share of newborns delivered in hospitals with low-level centers (-2 points). Similar patterns were observed in 1500- to 2499-g newborns. CONCLUSIONS: The introduction of new midlevel units was associated with significant shifts of births from both high-level and low-level hospitals to midlevel hospitals. In areas in which new midlevel units opened, the majority of the increase in midlevel deliveries was attributable to shifts from high-level unit births. Continued proliferation of midlevel units should be carefully assessed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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12. Prevalence and costs of chronic conditions in the VA health care system.
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Yu W, Ravelo A, Wagner TH, Phibbs CS, Bhandari A, Chen S, Barnett PG, Yu, Wei, Ravelo, Arliene, Wagner, Todd H, Phibbs, Ciaran S, Bhandari, Aman, Chen, Shuo, and Barnett, Paul G
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Chronic conditions are among the most common causes of death and disability in the United States. Patients with such conditions receive disproportionate amounts of health care services and therefore cost more per capita than the average patient. This study assesses the prevalence among the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) health care users and VA expenditures (costs) of 29 common chronic conditions. The authors used regression to identify the marginal impact of these conditions on total, inpatient, outpatient, and pharmacy costs. Excluding costs of contracted medical services at non-VA facilities, total VA health care expenditures in fiscal year 1999 (FY1999) were $14.3 billion. Among the 3.4 million VA patients in FY1999, 72 percent had 1 or more of the 29 chronic conditions, and these patients accounted for 96 percent of the total costs ($13.7 billion). In addition, 35 percent (1.2 million) of VA health care users had 3 or more of the 29 chronic conditions. These individuals accounted for 73 percent of the total cost. Overall, VA health care users have more chronic diseases than the general population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
13. Is travel distance a barrier to veterans' use of VA hospitals for medical surgical care?
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Mooney C, Zwanziger J, Phibbs CS, and Schmitt S
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Lengthy travel distances may explain why relatively few veterans in the United States use VA hospitals for inpatient medical/surgical care. We used two approaches to distinguish the effect of distance on VA use from other factors such as access to alternatives and veterans' characteristics. The first approach describes how disparities in travel distance to the VA are related to other characteristics of geographic areas. The second approach involved a multivariate analysis of VA use in postal zip code areas (ZCAs). We used several sources of data to estimate the number of veterans who had priority access to the VA so that use rates could be estimated. Access to hospitals was characterized by estimated travel distance to inpatient providers that typically serve each ZCA. The results demonstrate that travel distance to the VA is variable, with veterans in rural areas traveling much farther for VA care than veterans in areas of high population density. However, Medicare recipients also travel farther in areas of low population density. In some areas veterans must travel lengthy distances for VA care because VA hospitals which were built over the past few decades are not located close to areas in which veterans reside in the 1990s. The disparities in travel distance suggest inequitable access to the VA. Use of the VA decreases with increases in travel distance only up to about 15 miles, after which use is relatively insensitive to further increases in distance. The multivariate analyses indicate that those over 65 are less sensitive to distance than younger veterans, even though those over 65 are Medicare eligible and therefore have inexpensive access to alternatives. The results suggest that proximity to a VA hospital is only one of many factors determining VA use. Further research is indicated to develop an appropriate response to the needs of the small but apparently dedicated group of VA users who are traveling very long distances to obtain VA care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2000
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14. Who's in the NICU? A population-level analysis.
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Hughes CS, Schmitt S, Passarella M, Lorch SA, and Phibbs CS
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- Humans, Infant, Newborn, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Female, Male, Infant, Premature, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Intensive Care Units, Neonatal statistics & numerical data, Gestational Age, Birth Weight
- Abstract
Objective: To understand the characteristics of infants admitted to US NICUs., Study Design: 2006-2014 linked birth certificate and hospital discharge data for potentially viable deliveries in Pennsylvania and South Carolina were used. NICU admissions were identified using revenue codes. NICU-admitted infants were categorized by gestational age (GA), birthweight, and condition severity (for GA 35+ weeks). We also assessed total patient days and trends over time., Results: 12% of infants were admitted to a NICU; 13.6% were GA < 32 weeks (45.3% of total days); 36.1% were GA 32-36 weeks (31.2% of total days); and 50.4% were GA 37+ weeks (23.5% of total days). 20% of admissions were for infants with GA 35+ weeks and mild conditions. Admissions increased numerically from 11.2% (2006) to 13.0% (2014), with increases among infants 35+ weeks., Conclusion: Most NICU admissions are for infants 35+ weeks GA, many with mild conditions who may be accommodated in well-baby units., (© 2024. This is a U.S. Government work and not under copyright protection in the US; foreign copyright protection may apply.)
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- 2024
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15. Assessing the Infant Effects of Severe Maternal Morbidity.
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Phibbs CS and Phibbs CM
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- Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Pregnancy, Morbidity, Pregnancy Complications epidemiology
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
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- 2024
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16. The impact of volume and neonatal level of care on outcomes of moderate and late preterm infants.
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Salazar EG, Passarella M, Formanowski B, Phibbs CS, Lorch SA, and Handley SC
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- Humans, Infant, Newborn, Retrospective Studies, Female, Male, Intensive Care Units, Neonatal, Hospitals, Low-Volume statistics & numerical data, Gestational Age, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, United States, Infant Mortality, Infant, Respiratory Distress Syndrome, Newborn therapy, Infant, Premature, Hospitals, High-Volume, Infant, Premature, Diseases therapy, Infant, Premature, Diseases mortality
- Abstract
Objective: Evaluate the relationship of neonatal unit level of care (LOC) and volume with mortality or morbidity in moderate-late preterm (MLP) (32-36 weeks' gestation) infants., Design: Retrospective cohort study of 650,865 inborn MLP infants in 4976 hospitals-years using 2003-2015 linked administrative data from 4 states. Exposure was combined neonatal LOC and MLP annual volume. The primary outcome was death or morbidity (respiratory distress syndrome, severe intraventricular hemorrhage, necrotizing enterocolitis, sepsis, infection, pneumothorax, extreme length of stay) with components as secondary outcomes. Poisson regression models adjusted for patient characteristics with a random effect for unit were used., Results: In adjusted models, high-volume level 2 units had a lower risk of the primary outcome compared to low-volume level 3 units (aIRR 0.90 [95% CI 0.83-0.98] vs. aIRR 1.13 [95% CI 1.03-1.24], p < 0.001) CONCLUSION: MLP infants had improved outcomes in high-volume level 2 units compared to low-volume level 3 units in adjusted analysis., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.)
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- 2024
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17. The Impact of Hospital Delivery Volumes of Newborns Born Very Preterm on Mortality and Morbidity.
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Phibbs CS, Passarella M, Schmitt SK, Martin A, and Lorch SA
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Objective: To examine if the annual patient volume of infants born very preterm (VPT, gestational age <32 weeks) at a hospital is associated with neonatal mortality and morbidity., Study Design: We performed an observational, secondary data analysis using a 20-year panel of birth certificates linked to hospital discharge abstracts, including transfers in California, Michigan, Missouri, Oregon, Pennsylvania, and South Carolina from 1996 through 2015. The study included all in-hospital VPT deliveries (n = 208 261). Study outcomes were in-hospital mortality or serious morbidity (intraventricular hemorrhage, necrotizing enterocolitis, retinopathy of prematurity, or bronchopulmonary dysplasia), attributed to the hospital of birth. Poisson regression models estimated the risk-adjusted relative risk (RR) for mortality and serious morbidity across different patient volume categories within a given hospital using hospital fixed effects., Results: The risk of mortality and serious morbidity for VPT infants increased as the number of infants born VPT at a hospital decreased. Compared with VPT delivery volumes >100 infants per year, the risk of mortality increased when a given hospital had VPT delivery volumes < 60 per year, ranging from a RR of 1.13 (95% C.I. 1.02-1.25) for volumes between 50 to 59 and 1.39 (1.19-1.62) for VPT volumes <10, and the risk of mortality or serious morbidity increased when a given hospital had VPT volumes <100, ranging from a RR of 1.05 (1.02-1.08) for volumes between 90 to 99 and 1.27 (1.19-1.36) for VPT volumes <10., Conclusions: These results suggest that, for VPT infants, the risk of both mortality and mortality or serious morbidity is increased as the VPT volume within a given hospital declines., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest Partial support by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (RO1 HD084819). The Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council (PHC4) is an independent state agency responsible for addressing the problem of escalating health costs, ensuring the quality of health care, and increasing access to health care for all citizens, regardless of ability to pay. PHC4 has provided data to this entity in an effort to further PHC4's mission of educating the public and containing health care costs in Pennsylvania. PHC4, its agents, and staff, have made no representation, guarantee, or warranty, express or implied, that the data -- financial, patient, payor, and physician specific information -- provided to this entity, are error free, or that the use of the data will avoid differences of opinion or interpretation. This analysis was not prepared by PHC4. This analysis was done by the research team at University of Pennsylvania/Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. PHC4, its agents and staff, bear no responsibility or liability for the results of the analysis, which are solely the opinion of this entity., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2024
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18. Life-sustaining treatment decisions and family evaluations of end-of-life care for Veteran decedents in Department of Veterans Affairs nursing homes.
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Levy C, Esmaeili A, Smith D, Hogikyan RV, Periyakoil VS, Carpenter JG, Sales A, Phibbs CS, Murray A, and Ersek M
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- Humans, Male, United States, Female, Retrospective Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Family psychology, Life Support Care statistics & numerical data, Decision Making, Terminal Care statistics & numerical data, Nursing Homes statistics & numerical data, Veterans statistics & numerical data, Veterans psychology, United States Department of Veterans Affairs
- Abstract
Background: Modeled after the Physician Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment program, the Veterans Health Administration (VA) implemented the Life-Sustaining Treatment (LST) Decisions Initiative to improve end-of-life outcomes by standardizing LST preference documentation for seriously ill Veterans. This study examined the associations between LST documentation and family evaluation of care in the final month of life for Veterans in VA nursing homes., Methods: Retrospective, cross-sectional analysis of data for decedents in VA nursing homes between July 1, 2018 and January 31, 2020 (N = 14,575). Regression modeling generated odds for key end-of-life outcomes and family ratings of care quality., Results: LST preferences were documented for 12,928 (89%) of VA nursing home decedents. Contrary to our hypothesis, neither receipt of wanted medications and medical treatment (adjusted odds ratio [OR]: 0.85, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.63, 1.16) nor ratings of overall care in the last month of life (adjusted OR: 0.96, 95% CI 0.76, 1.22) differed significantly between those with and without completed LST templates in adjusted analyses., Conclusions: Among Community Living Center (CLC) decedents, 89% had documented LST preferences. No significant differences were observed in family ratings of care between Veterans with and without documentation of LST preferences. Interventions aimed at improving family ratings of end-of-life care quality in CLCs should not target LST documentation in isolation of other factors associated with higher family ratings of end-of-life care quality., (Published 2024. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.)
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- 2024
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19. Racial and ethnic disparities in severe maternal morbidity from pregnancy through 1-year postpartum.
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Boghossian NS, Greenberg LT, Lorch SA, Phibbs CS, Buzas JS, Passarella M, Saade GR, and Rogowski J
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Young Adult, Black or African American, Healthcare Disparities ethnology, Healthcare Disparities statistics & numerical data, Hispanic or Latino, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Oregon epidemiology, Postpartum Period, Racial Groups, Retrospective Studies, South Carolina epidemiology, United States epidemiology, Asian, American Indian or Alaska Native, White, Ethnicity, Health Status Disparities, Pregnancy Complications ethnology, Pregnancy Complications epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Previous studies examining racial and ethnic disparities in severe maternal morbidity (SMM) have mainly focused on intrapartum hospitalization. There is limited information regarding the racial and ethnic distribution of SMM occurring in the antepartum and postpartum periods, including SMM occurring beyond the traditional 6 weeks postpartum period., Objective: To examine the racial and ethnic distribution of SMM during antepartum, intrapartum, and postpartum hospitalizations through 1-year postpartum, overall and stratified by maternal sociodemographic factors, and to estimate the percent increase in SMM by race and ethnicity and maternal sociodemographic factors within each racial and ethnic group after accounting for both antepartum and postpartum SMM through 1-year postpartum rather than just SMM occurring during the intrapartum hospitalization., Study Design: We conducted a retrospective cohort study using birth and fetal death certificate data linked to hospital discharge records from Michigan, Oregon, and South Carolina from 2008-2020. We examined the distribution of non-transfusion SMM and total SMM per 10,000 cases during antepartum, intrapartum, and postpartum hospitalizations through 365 days postpartum by race and ethnicity and by maternal education and insurance type within each racial and ethnic group. We subsequently examined "SMM cases added" by race and ethnicity and by maternal education and insurance type within each racial and ethnic group. The "SMM cases added" represent cases among unique individuals that are identified by considering the antepartum and postpartum periods but that would be missed if only the intrapartum hospitalization cases were included., Results: Among 2,584,206 birthing individuals, a total of 37,112 (1.4%) individuals experienced non-transfusion SMM and 64,661 (2.5%) experienced any SMM during antepartum, intrapartum, and/or postpartum hospitalization. Black individuals had the highest rate of antepartum, intrapartum, and postpartum non-transfusion and total SMM followed by American Indian individuals. Asian individuals had the lowest rate of non-transfusion and total SMM during antepartum and postpartum hospitalizations while White individuals had the lowest rate of non-transfusion and total SMM during the intrapartum hospitalization. Black individuals were 1.9 times more likely to experience non-transfusion SMM during the intrapartum hospitalization than White individuals, which increased to 2.8 times during the antepartum period and to 2.5 times during the postpartum period. Asian and Hispanic individuals were less likely to experience SMM in the postpartum period than White individuals. Including antepartum and postpartum hospitalizations resulted in disproportionately more cases among Black and American Indian individuals than among White, Hispanic, and Asian individuals. The additional cases were also more likely to occur among individuals with lower educational levels and individuals on government insurance., Conclusion: Racial disparities in SMM are underreported in estimates that focus on the intrapartum hospitalization. Additionally, individuals with low socio-economic status bear the greatest burden of SMM occurring during the antepartum and postpartum periods. Approaches that focus on mitigating SMM during the intrapartum period only do not address the full spectrum of health disparities. El resumen está disponible en Español al final del artículo., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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20. Acute hospitalizations and outcomes in Veterans Affairs Hospitals 2011 to 2017.
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Yoon J, Phibbs CS, Ong MK, Vanneman ME, Kizer KW, Chow A, Redd A, Jiang H, and Zhang Y
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- Humans, United States, Male, Female, Aged, Middle Aged, Longitudinal Studies, United States Department of Veterans Affairs statistics & numerical data, Hospital Costs statistics & numerical data, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Length of Stay economics, Hospitals, Veterans statistics & numerical data, Patient Readmission statistics & numerical data, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Hospitalization economics, Hospital Mortality trends
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Hospitals within the Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system exhibited growing use of observation care. It is unknown how this affected VA hospital performance since observation care is not included in acute inpatient measures. To examine changes in VA hospitalization outcomes and whether it was affected by shifting acute inpatient care to observation care. Longitudinal analysis of 986,355 acute hospitalizations and observation stays in 11 states 2011 to 2017. We estimated temporal changes in 30-day mortality, 30-day readmissions, costs, and length of stay (LOS) for all hospitalizations and 6 conditions in adjusted models. Changes in mortality and readmissions were compared including and excluding observation care. A 9% drop in acute hospitalizations was offset by a 157% increase in observation stays 2011 to 2017. A 30-day mortality decreased but readmissions did not when observation stays were included (all P < .05). Mean costs increased modestly; mean LOS was unchanged. There were differences by condition. VA hospital mortality decreased; there was no change in readmissions., Competing Interests: The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2024 the Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.)
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- 2024
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21. Severe maternal morbidity from pregnancy through 1 year postpartum.
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Boghossian NS, Greenberg LT, Buzas JS, Rogowski J, Lorch SA, Passarella M, Saade GR, and Phibbs CS
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- Humans, Female, Pregnancy, Retrospective Studies, Adult, Young Adult, Morbidity trends, South Carolina epidemiology, Pregnancy Complications epidemiology, Postpartum Period, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Few recent studies have examined the rate of severe maternal morbidity occurring during the antenatal and/or postpartum period to 42 days after delivery. However, little is known about the rate of severe maternal morbidity occurring beyond 42 days after delivery., Objective: This study aimed to examine the distribution of severe maternal morbidity and its indicators during antenatal, delivery, and postpartum hospitalizations to 365 days after delivery and to estimate the increase in severe maternal morbidity rate and its indicators after accounting for antenatal and postpartum severe maternal morbidity to 365 days after delivery., Study Design: This was a retrospective cohort study using birth and fetal death certificate data linked to hospital discharge records from Michigan, Oregon, and South Carolina from 2008 to 2020. This study examined the distribution of severe maternal morbidity, nontransfusion severe maternal morbidity, and severe maternal morbidity indicators during antenatal, delivery, and postpartum hospitalizations to 365 days after delivery. Subsequently, this study examined "severe maternal morbidity cases added," which represent cases among unique individuals that are included by considering the antenatal and postpartum periods but that would be missed if only the delivery hospitalization cases were included., Results: A total of 64,661 (2.5%) individuals experienced severe maternal morbidity, whereas 37,112 (1.4%) individuals experienced nontransfusion severe maternal morbidity during antenatal, delivery, and/or postpartum hospitalization. A total of 31% of severe maternal morbidity cases were added after accounting for severe maternal morbidity occurring during the antenatal or postpartum hospitalization to 365 days after delivery, whereas 49% of nontransfusion severe maternal morbidity cases were added after accounting for nontransfusion severe maternal morbidity occurring during the antenatal or postpartum periods. Severe maternal morbidity occurring between 43 and 365 days after delivery contributed to 12% of all severe maternal morbidity cases, whereas nontransfusion severe maternal morbidity occurring between 43 and 365 days after delivery contributed to 19% of all nontransfusion severe maternal morbidity cases., Conclusion: Our study showed that a total of 31% of severe maternal morbidity and 49% of nontransfusion severe maternal morbidity cases were added after accounting for severe maternal morbidity occurring during the antenatal or postpartum hospitalization to 365 days after delivery. Our findings highlight the importance of expanding the severe maternal morbidity definition beyond the delivery hospitalization to better capture the full period of increased risk, identify contributing factors, and design strategies to mitigate this risk. Only then can we improve outcomes for mothers and subsequently the quality of life of their infants., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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22. Differences in use of Veterans Health Administration and non-Veterans Health Administration hospitals by rural and urban Veterans after access expansions.
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Dizon MP, Kizer KW, Ong MK, Phibbs CS, Vanneman ME, Wong EP, Zhang Y, and Yoon J
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- Humans, United States, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Aged, Adult, Hospitals, Veterans statistics & numerical data, Veterans statistics & numerical data, Rural Population statistics & numerical data, United States Department of Veterans Affairs statistics & numerical data, United States Department of Veterans Affairs organization & administration, Health Services Accessibility statistics & numerical data, Health Services Accessibility standards, Urban Population statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Purpose: To examine changes in rural and urban Veterans' utilization of acute inpatient care in Veterans Health Administration (VHA) and non-VHA hospitals following access expansion from the Veterans Choice Act, which expanded eligibility for VHA-paid community hospitalization., Methods: Using repeated cross-sectional data of VHA enrollees' hospitalizations in 9 states (AZ, CA, CT, FL, LA, MA, NY, PA, and SC) between 2012 and 2017, we compared rural and urban Veterans' probability of admission in VHA and non-VHA hospitals by payer over time for elective and nonelective hospitalizations using multinomial logistic regression to adjust for patient-level sociodemographic features. We also used generalized linear models to compare rural and urban Veterans' travel distances to hospitals., Findings: Over time, the probability of VHA-paid community hospitalization increased more for rural Veterans than urban Veterans. For elective inpatient care, rural Veterans' probability of VHA-paid admission increased from 2.9% (95% CI 2.6%-3.2%) in 2012 to 6.5% (95% CI 5.8%-7.1%) in 2017. These changes were associated with a temporal trend that preceded and continued after the implementation of the Veterans Choice Act. Overall travel distances to hospitalizations were similar over time; however, the mean distance traveled decreased from 39.2 miles (95% CI 35.1-43.3) in 2012 to 32.3 miles (95% CI 30.2-34.4) in 2017 for rural Veterans receiving elective inpatient care in VHA-paid hospitals., Conclusions: Despite limited access to rural hospitals, these data demonstrate an increase in rural Veterans' use of non-VHA hospitals for acute inpatient care and a small reduction in distance traveled to elective inpatient services., (Published 2023. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.)
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- 2024
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23. Perinatal mental health and pregnancy-associated mortality: opportunities for change.
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Combellick JL, Esmaeili A, Johnson AM, Haskell SG, Phibbs CS, Manzo L, and Miller LJ
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- Humans, Female, Pregnancy, United States epidemiology, Adult, Veterans psychology, Veterans statistics & numerical data, Maternal Mortality trends, Mental Health, Quality Improvement, Pregnancy Outcome epidemiology, Postpartum Period, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Mental Disorders mortality, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Pregnancy Complications psychology, Pregnancy Complications mortality
- Abstract
Perinatal mental health conditions have been associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes, including maternal death. This quality improvement project analyzed pregnancy-associated death among veterans with mental health conditions in order to identify opportunities to improve healthcare and reduce maternal deaths. Pregnancy-associated deaths among veterans using Veterans Health Administration (VHA) maternity care benefits between fiscal year 2011 and 2020 were identified from national VHA databases. Deaths among individuals with active mental health conditions underwent individual chart review using a standardized abstraction template adapted from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Thirty-two pregnancy-associated deaths were identified among 39,720 paid deliveries with 81% (n = 26) occurring among individuals with an active perinatal mental health condition. In the perinatal mental health cohort, most deaths (n = 16, 62%) occurred in the late postpartum period and 42% (n = 11) were due to suicide, homicide, or overdose. Opportunities to improve care included addressing (1) racial disparities, (2) mental health effects of perinatal loss, (3) late postpartum vulnerability, (4) lack of psychotropic medication continuity, (5) mental health conditions in intimate partners, (6) child custody loss, (7) lack of patient education or stigmatizing patient education, and (8) missed opportunities for addressing reproductive health concerns in mental health contexts. Pregnancy-associated deaths related to active perinatal mental health conditions can be reduced. Mental healthcare clinicians, clinical teams, and healthcare systems have opportunities to improve care for individuals with perinatal mental health conditions., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Austria, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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24. Lower Oral Anticoagulant Prescribing for Atrial Fibrillation in Women Compared With Men.
- Author
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Manja V, Phibbs CS, Ananth L, Saechao F, and Frayne SM
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Administration, Oral, Sex Factors, Aged, Practice Patterns, Physicians' statistics & numerical data, Drug Prescriptions statistics & numerical data, Stroke prevention & control, Stroke etiology, Atrial Fibrillation drug therapy, Anticoagulants therapeutic use, Anticoagulants administration & dosage
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors have no competing interest to declare.
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- 2024
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25. Lower comorbidity scores and severity levels in Veterans Health Administration hospitals: a cross-sectional study.
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Dizon MP, Chow A, Ong MK, Phibbs CS, Vanneman ME, Zhang Y, and Yoon J
- Subjects
- Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, United States epidemiology, Male, Female, Aged, Middle Aged, Diagnosis-Related Groups statistics & numerical data, United States Department of Veterans Affairs statistics & numerical data, Medicare statistics & numerical data, Aged, 80 and over, Veterans statistics & numerical data, Comorbidity, Hospitals, Veterans statistics & numerical data, Severity of Illness Index
- Abstract
Background: Previous studies found that documentation of comorbidities differed when Veterans received care within versus outside Veterans Health Administration (VHA). Changes to medical center funding, increased attention to performance reporting, and expansion of Clinical Documentation Improvement programs, however, may have caused coding in VHA to change., Methods: Using repeated cross-sectional data, we compared Elixhauser-van Walraven scores and Medicare Severity Diagnosis Related Group (DRG) severity levels for Veterans' admissions across settings and payers over time, utilizing a linkage of VHA and all-payer discharge data for 2012-2017 in seven US states. To minimize selection bias, we analyzed records for Veterans admitted to both VHA and non-VHA hospitals in the same year. Using generalized linear models, we adjusted for patient and hospital characteristics., Results: Following adjustment, VHA admissions consistently had the lowest predicted mean comorbidity scores (4.44 (95% CI 4.34-4.55)) and lowest probability of using the most severe DRG (22.1% (95% CI 21.4%-22.8%)). In contrast, Medicare-covered admissions had the highest predicted mean comorbidity score (5.71 (95% CI 5.56-5.85)) and highest probability of using the top DRG (35.3% (95% CI 34.2%-36.4%))., Conclusions: More effective strategies may be needed to improve VHA documentation, and current risk-adjusted comparisons should account for differences in coding intensity., (© 2024. This is a U.S. Government work and not under copyright protection in the US; foreign copyright protection may apply.)
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- 2024
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26. Evaluating feedback reports to support documentation of veterans' care preferences in home based primary care.
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Levy C, Kononowech J, Ersek M, Phibbs CS, Scott W, and Sales A
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- Humans, United States, Male, Female, Aged, Feedback, Documentation methods, Documentation standards, Patient Preference, Primary Health Care methods, Primary Health Care standards, Veterans psychology, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Home Care Services standards
- Abstract
Background: To evaluate the effectiveness of delivering feedback reports to increase completion of LST notes among VA Home Based Primary Care (HBPC) teams. The Life Sustaining Treatment Decisions Initiative (LSTDI) was implemented throughout the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) in the United States in 2017 to ensure that seriously ill Veterans have care goals and LST decisions elicited and documented., Methods: We distributed monthly feedback reports summarizing LST template completion rates to 13 HBPC intervention sites between October 2018 and February 2020 as the sole implementation strategy. We used principal component analyses to match intervention to 26 comparison sites and used interrupted time series/segmented regression analyses to evaluate the differences in LST template completion rates between intervention and comparison sites. Data were extracted from national databases for VA HBPC in addition to interviews and surveys in a mixed methods process evaluation., Results: LST template completion rose from 6.3 to 41.9% across both intervention and comparison HBPC teams between March 1, 2018, and February 26, 2020. There were no statistically significant differences for intervention sites that received feedback reports., Conclusions: Feedback reports did not increase documentation of LST preferences for Veterans at intervention compared with comparison sites. Observed increases in completion rates across intervention and comparison sites can likely be attributed to implementation strategies used nationally as part of the national roll-out of the LSTDI. Our results suggest that feedback reports alone were not an effective implementation strategy to augment national implementation strategies in HBPC teams., (© 2024. This is a U.S. Government work and not under copyright protection in the US; foreign copyright protection may apply.)
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- 2024
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27. Behavioral weight management use in the Veterans Health Administration: Sociodemographic and health correlates.
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Breland JY, Raikov I, Hoggatt KJ, Phibbs CS, Maguen S, Timko C, Saechao F, and Frayne SM
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- Humans, Male, Female, United States, Middle Aged, Adult, Aged, Adolescent, Weight Reduction Programs statistics & numerical data, Veterans statistics & numerical data, Veterans psychology, Young Adult, Behavior Therapy methods, Primary Health Care statistics & numerical data, Cohort Studies, Veterans Health, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Obesity therapy
- Abstract
Introduction: Over 40 % of United States Veterans Health Administration (VHA) primary care patients have obesity. Few patients use VHA's flagship weight management program, MOVE! and there is little information on other behavioral weight management program use., Methods: The national United States cohort included over 1.5 million primary care patients with obesity, age 18-79, based on VHA administrative data. Gender stratified multivariable logistic regression identified correlates of weight management use in the year after a patient's first primary care appointment (alpha of 0.05). Weight management use was defined as MOVE! or nutrition clinic visits., Results: The cohort included 121,235 women and 1,521,547 men with 13 % and 7 % using weight management, respectively. Point estimates for specific correlates of use were similar between women and men, and across programs. Black patients were more likely to use weight management than White patients. Several physical and mental health diagnoses were also associated with increased use, such as sleep apnea and eating disorders. Age and distance from VHA were negatively associated with weight management use., Conclusions: When assessing multiple types of weight management visits, weight management care in VHA appears to be used more often by some populations at higher risk for obesity. Other groups may need additional outreach, such as those living far from VHA. Future work should focus on outreach and prevention efforts to increase overall use rates. This work could also examine the benefits of tailoring care for populations in greatest need., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest All authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest., (Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
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- 2024
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28. Association between stillbirth and severe maternal morbidity.
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Nyarko SH, Greenberg LT, Phibbs CS, Buzas JS, Lorch SA, Rogowski J, Saade GR, Passarella M, and Boghossian NS
- Subjects
- Pregnancy, Female, Humans, Stillbirth epidemiology, Retrospective Studies, Fetal Death, Pregnancy Complications epidemiology, Pre-Eclampsia epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Severe maternal morbidity has been increasing in the past few decades. Few studies have examined the risk of severe maternal morbidity among individuals with stillbirths vs individuals with live-birth deliveries., Objective: This study aimed to examine the prevalence and risk of severe maternal morbidity among individuals with stillbirths vs individuals with live-birth deliveries during delivery hospitalization as a primary outcome and during the postpartum period as a secondary outcome., Study Design: This was a retrospective cohort study using birth and fetal death certificate data linked to hospital discharge records from California (2008-2018), Michigan (2008-2020), Missouri (2008-2014), Pennsylvania (2008-2014), and South Carolina (2008-2020). Relative risk regression analysis was used to examine the crude and adjusted relative risks of severe maternal morbidity along with 95% confidence intervals among individuals with stillbirths vs individuals with live-birth deliveries, adjusting for birth year, state of residence, maternal sociodemographic characteristics, and the obstetric comorbidity index., Results: Of the 8,694,912 deliveries, 35,012 (0.40%) were stillbirths. Compared with individuals with live-birth deliveries, those with stillbirths were more likely to be non-Hispanic Black (10.8% vs 20.5%); have Medicaid (46.5% vs 52.0%); have pregnancy complications, including preexisting diabetes mellitus (1.1% vs 4.3%), preexisting hypertension (2.3% vs 6.2%), and preeclampsia (4.4% vs 8.4%); have multiple pregnancies (1.6% vs 6.2%); and reside in South Carolina (7.4% vs 11.6%). During delivery hospitalization, the prevalence rates of severe maternal morbidity were 791 cases per 10,000 deliveries for stillbirths and 154 cases per 10,000 deliveries for live-birth deliveries, whereas the prevalence rates for nontransfusion severe maternal morbidity were 502 cases per 10,000 deliveries for stillbirths and 68 cases per 10,000 deliveries for live-birth deliveries. The crude relative risk for severe maternal morbidity was 5.1 (95% confidence interval, 4.9-5.3), whereas the adjusted relative risk was 1.6 (95% confidence interval, 1.5-1.8). For nontransfusion severe maternal morbidity among stillbirths vs live-birth deliveries, the crude relative risk was 7.4 (95% confidence interval, 7.0-7.7), whereas the adjusted relative risk was 2.0 (95% confidence interval, 1.8-2.3). This risk was not only elevated among individuals with stillbirth during the delivery hospitalization but also through 1 year after delivery (severe maternal morbidity adjusted relative risk, 1.3; 95% confidence interval, 1.1-1.4; nontransfusion severe maternal morbidity adjusted relative risk, 1.2; 95% confidence interval, 1.1-1.3)., Conclusion: Stillbirth was found to be an important contributor to severe maternal morbidity., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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29. Validity of Birth Certificate Data Compared With Hospital Discharge Data in Reporting Maternal Morbidity and Disparities.
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Gemmill A, Passarella M, Phibbs CS, Main EK, Lorch SA, Kozhimannil KB, Carmichael SL, and Leonard SA
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- Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Hospitals, Incidence, Black or African American, White, Birth Certificates, Patient Discharge, Morbidity, Maternal Health
- Abstract
A growing number of studies are using birth certificate data, despite data-quality concerns, to study maternal morbidity and associated disparities. We examined whether conclusions about the incidence of maternal morbidity, including Black-White disparities, differ between birth certificate data and hospitalization data. Using linked birth certificate and hospitalization data from California and Michigan for 2018 (N=543,469), we found that maternal morbidity measures using birth certificate data alone are substantially underreported and have poor validity. Furthermore, the degree of underreporting in birth certificate data differs between Black and White individuals and results in erroneous inferences about disparities. Overall, Black-White disparities were more modest in the birth certificate data compared with the hospitalization data. Birth certificate data alone are inadequate for studies of maternal morbidity and associated racial disparities., Competing Interests: Financial Disclosure The authors did not report any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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30. Hospital and Patient Factors Affecting Veterans' Hospital Choice.
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Yoon J, Ong MK, Vanneman ME, Zhang Y, Dizon MP, and Phibbs CS
- Subjects
- United States, Humans, Male, Female, Longitudinal Studies, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Hospitals, Hospitalization, Hospitals, Veterans, Health Services Accessibility, Veterans psychology
- Abstract
Veterans enrolled in the Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system gained greater access to non-VA care beginning in 2014. We examined hospital and Veteran characteristics associated with hospital choice. We conducted a longitudinal study of elective hospitalizations 2011 to 2017 in 11 states and modeled patients' choice of VA hospital, large non-VA hospital, or small non-VA hospital in conditional logit models. Patients had higher odds of choosing a hospital with an academic affiliation, better patient experience rating, location closer to them, and a more common hospital type. Patients who were male, racial/ethnic minorities, had higher VA enrollment priority, and had a mental health comorbidity were more likely than other patients to choose a VA hospital than a non-VA hospital. Our findings suggest that patients respond to certain hospital attributes. VA hospitals may need to maintain or achieve high levels of quality and patient experience to attract or retain patients in the future., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2024
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31. In Reply.
- Author
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Leonard SA, Phibbs CS, Main EK, Kozhimannil KB, and Bateman BT
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Financial Disclosure The authors did not report any potential conflicts of interest.
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- 2024
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32. Improving the Maternity Care Safety Net: Establishing Maternal Mortality Surveillance for Non-Obstetric Providers and Institutions.
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Combellick JL, Basile Ibrahim B, Esmaeili A, Phibbs CS, Johnson AM, Patton EW, Manzo L, and Haskell SG
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Pregnancy, Maternal Mortality, Postpartum Period, Live Birth, Maternal Health Services, Obstetrics
- Abstract
The siloed nature of maternity care has been noted as a system-level factor negatively impacting maternal outcomes. Veterans Health Administration (VA) provides multi-specialty healthcare before, during, and after pregnancy but purchases obstetric care from community providers. VA providers may be unaware of perinatal complications, while community-based maternity care providers may be unaware of upstream factors affecting the pregnancy. To optimize maternal outcomes, the VA has initiated a system-level surveillance and review process designed to improve non-obstetric care for veterans experiencing a pregnancy. This quality improvement project aimed to describe the VA-based maternal mortality review process and to report maternal mortality (pregnancy-related death up to 42 days postpartum) and pregnancy-associated mortality (death from any cause up to 1 year postpartum) among veterans who use VA maternity care benefits. Pregnancies and pregnancy-associated deaths between fiscal year (FY) 2011-2020 were identified from national VA databases. All deaths underwent individual chart review and abstraction that focused on multi-specialty care received at the VA in the year prior to pregnancy until the time of death. Thirty-two pregnancy-associated deaths were confirmed among 39,720 pregnancies (PAMR = 80.6 per 100,000 live births). Fifty percent of deaths occurred among individuals who had experienced adverse social determinants of health. Mental health conditions affected 81%. Half (n = 16, 50%) of all deaths occurred in the late postpartum period (43-365 days postpartum) after maternity care had ended. More than half of these late postpartum deaths (n = 9, 56.2%) were related to suicide, homicide, or overdose. Integration of care delivered during the perinatal period (pregnancy through postpartum) from primary, mental health, emergency, and specialty care providers may be enhanced through a system-based approach to pregnancy-associated death surveillance and review. This quality improvement project has implications for all healthcare settings where coordination between obstetric and non-obstetric providers is needed.
- Published
- 2023
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33. Better performance for right-skewed data using an alternative gamma model.
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Veazie P, Intrator O, Kinosian B, and Phibbs CS
- Subjects
- Humans, Computer Simulation, Health Care Costs, Health Services Research
- Abstract
Background: The Maximum Likelihood Estimator (MLE) for parameters of the gamma distribution is commonly used to estimate models of right-skewed variables such as costs, hospital length of stay, and appointment wait times in Economics and Healthcare research. The common specification for this estimator assumes the variance is proportional to the square of the mean, which underlies estimation and specification tests. We present a specification in which the variance is directly proportional to the mean., Methods: We used simulation experiments to investigate finite sample results, and we used United States Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) healthcare cost data as an empirical example comparing the fit and predictive ability of the models., Results: Simulation showed the MLE based on a correctly specified alternative has less parameter bias, lower standard errors, and less skewness in distribution than a misspecified standard model. The application to VA healthcare cost data showed the alternative specification can have better R square, smaller root mean squared error, and smaller mean residuals within deciles of predicted values., Conclusions: The alternative gamma specification can be a useful alternative to the standard specification for estimating models of right-skewed continuous variables., (© 2023. This is a U.S. Government work and not under copyright protection in the US; foreign copyright protection may apply.)
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- 2023
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34. Outcomes of Veterans Treated in Veterans Affairs Hospitals vs Non-Veterans Affairs Hospitals.
- Author
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Yoon J, Phibbs CS, Ong MK, Vanneman ME, Chow A, Redd A, Kizer KW, Dizon MP, Wong E, and Zhang Y
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Aged, Cohort Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Hospitals, Hemorrhage, Veterans, Myocardial Infarction epidemiology, Myocardial Infarction therapy, Heart Failure epidemiology, Heart Failure therapy, Pneumonia epidemiology, Pneumonia therapy, Stroke
- Abstract
Importance: Many veterans enrolled in the Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system have access to non-VA care through insurance and VA-purchased community care. Prior comparisons of VA and non-VA hospital outcomes have been limited to subpopulations., Objective: To compare outcomes for 6 acute conditions in VA and non-VA hospitals for younger and older veterans using VA and all-payer discharge data., Design, Setting, and Participants: This cohort study used a repeated cross-sectional analysis of hospitalization records for acute myocardial infarction (AMI), coronary artery bypass graft (CABG), gastrointestinal (GI) hemorrhage, heart failure (HF), pneumonia, and stroke. Participants included VA enrollees from 11 states at VA and non-VA hospitals from 2012 to 2017. Analysis was conducted from July 1, 2022, to October 18, 2023., Exposures: Treatment in VA or non-VA hospital., Main Outcome and Measures: Thirty-day mortality, 30-day readmission, length of stay (LOS), and costs. Average treatment outcomes of VA hospitals were estimated using inverse probability weighted regression adjustment to account for selection into hospitals. Models were stratified by veterans' age (aged less than 65 years and aged 65 years and older)., Results: There was a total of 593 578 hospitalizations and 414 861 patients with mean (SD) age 75 (12) years, 405 602 males (98%), 442 297 hospitalizations of non-Hispanic White individuals (75%) and 73 155 hospitalizations of non-Hispanic Black individuals (12%) overall. VA hospitalizations had a lower probability of 30-day mortality for HF (age ≥65 years, -0.02 [95% CI, -0.03 to -0.01]) and stroke (age <65 years, -0.03 [95% CI, -0.05 to -0.02]; age ≥65 years, -0.05 [95% CI, -0.07 to -0.03]). VA hospitalizations had a lower probability of 30-day readmission for CABG (age <65 years, -0.04 [95% CI, -0.06 to -0.01]; age ≥65 years, -0.05 [95% CI, -0.07 to -0.02]), GI hemorrhage (age <65 years, -0.04 [95% CI, -0.06 to -0.03]), HF (age <65 years, -0.05 [95% CI, -0.07 to -0.03]), pneumonia (age <65 years, -0.04 [95% CI, -0.06 to -0.03]; age ≥65 years, -0.03 [95% CI, -0.04 to -0.02]), and stroke (age <65 years, -0.11 [95% CI, -0.13 to -0.09]; age ≥65 years, -0.13 [95% CI, -0.16 to -0.10]) but higher probability of readmission for AMI (age <65 years, 0.04 [95% CI, 0.01 to 0.06]). VA hospitalizations had a longer mean LOS and higher costs for all conditions, except AMI and stroke in younger patients., Conclusions and Relevance: In this cohort study of veterans, VA hospitalizations had lower mortality for HF and stroke and lower readmissions, longer LOS, and higher costs for most conditions compared with non-VA hospitalizations with differences by condition and age group. There were tradeoffs between better outcomes and higher resource use in VA hospitals for some conditions.
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- 2023
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35. Chronic Hypertension in Pregnancy and Racial-Ethnic Disparities in Complications.
- Author
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Leonard SA, Formanowski BL, Phibbs CS, Lorch S, Main EK, Kozhimannil KB, Passarella M, and Bateman BT
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Pregnancy, American Indian or Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, Black or African American, Hispanic or Latino, Asian, White, Hypertension complications, Hypertension epidemiology, Health Status Disparities
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate whether there are individual- and population-level associations between chronic hypertension and pregnancy complications, and to assess differences across seven racial-ethnic groups., Methods: This population-based study used linked vital statistics and hospitalization discharge data from all live and stillbirths in California (2008-2018), Michigan (2008-2020), Oregon (2008-2020), Pennsylvania (2008-2014), and South Carolina (2008-2020). We used multivariable log-binomial regression models to estimate risk ratios (RRs) and population attributable risk (PAR) percentages with 95% CIs for associations between chronic hypertension and several obstetric and neonatal outcomes, selected based on prior evidence and pathologic pathways. We adjusted models for demographic factors (race and ethnicity, payment method, educational attainment), age, body mass index, obstetric history, delivery year, and state, and conducted analyses stratified across seven racial-ethnic groups., Results: The study included 7,955,713 pregnancies, of which 168,972 (2.1%) were complicated by chronic hypertension. Chronic hypertension was associated with several adverse obstetric and neonatal outcomes, with the largest adjusted PAR percentages observed for preeclampsia with severe features or eclampsia (22.4; 95% CI 22.2-22.6), acute renal failure (13.6; 95% CI 12.6-14.6), and pulmonary edema (10.7; 95% CI 8.9-12.6). Estimated RRs overall were similar across racial-ethnic groups, but PAR percentages varied. The adjusted PAR percentages (95% CI) for severe maternal morbidity-a widely used composite of acute severe events-for people who were American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black, Latino, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, White, and Multiracial or Other were 5.0 (1.1-8.8), 3.7 (3.0-4.3), 9.0 (8.2-9.8), 3.9 (3.6-4.3), 11.6 (6.4-16.5), 3.2 (2.9-3.5), and 5.5 (4.2-6.9), respectively., Conclusion: Chronic hypertension accounts for a substantial fraction of obstetric and neonatal morbidity and contributes to higher complication rates, particularly for people who are Black or Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander., Competing Interests: Financial Disclosure Ciaran S. Phibbs received payment from Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough as expert witness, which is not related to this article. The other authors did not report any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.)
- Published
- 2023
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36. Perinatal Care Measures Are Incomplete If They Do Not Assess The Birth Parent-Infant Dyad As A Whole.
- Author
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Handley SC, Formanowski B, Passarella M, Kozhimannil KB, Leonard SA, Main EK, Phibbs CS, and Lorch SA
- Subjects
- Female, Pregnancy, Infant, Newborn, Child, Humans, Infant, Health Status, Hospitalization, Parents, Perinatal Care, Administrative Personnel
- Abstract
Measures of perinatal care quality and outcomes often focus on either the birth parent or the infant. We used linked vital statistics and hospital discharge data to describe a dyadic measure (including both the birth parent and the infant) for perinatal care during the birth hospitalization. In this five-state cohort of 2010-18 births, 21.6 percent of birth parent-infant dyads experienced at least one complication, and 9.6 percent experienced a severe complication. Severe infant complications were eight times more prevalent than severe birth parent complications. Among birth parents with a severe complication, the co-occurrence of a severe infant complication ranged from 2 percent to 51 percent, whereas among infants with a severe complication, the co-occurrence of a severe birth parent complication was rare, ranging from 0.04 percent to 5 percent. These data suggest that measures, clinical interventions, public reporting, and policies focused on either the birth parent or the infant are incomplete in their assessment of a healthy dyad. Thus, clinicians, administrators, and policy makers should evaluate dyadic measures, incentivize positive outcomes for both patients (parent and infant), and create policies that support the health of the dyad.
- Published
- 2023
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37. Association of Sickle Cell Disease With Racial Disparities and Severe Maternal Morbidities in Black Individuals.
- Author
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Boghossian NS, Greenberg LT, Saade GR, Rogowski J, Phibbs CS, Passarella M, Buzas JS, and Lorch SA
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Cohort Studies, Morbidity, Retrospective Studies, United States, Pregnancy Outcome, Pregnancy Complications, Hematologic, White, Health Status Disparities, Black or African American, Anemia, Sickle Cell complications, Anemia, Sickle Cell epidemiology, Black People
- Abstract
Importance: Little is known about the association between sickle cell disease (SCD) and severe maternal morbidity (SMM)., Objective: To examine the association of SCD with racial disparities in SMM and with SMM among Black individuals., Design, Setting, and Participants: This cohort study was a retrospective population-based investigation of individuals with and without SCD in 5 states (California [2008-2018], Michigan [2008-2020], Missouri [2008-2014], Pennsylvania [2008-2014], and South Carolina [2008-2020]) delivering a fetal death or live birth. Data were analyzed between July and December 2022., Exposure: Sickle cell disease identified during the delivery admission by using International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision and Tenth Revision codes., Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcomes were SMM including and excluding blood transfusions during the delivery hospitalization. Modified Poisson regression was used to estimate risk ratios (RRs) adjusted for birth year, state, insurance type, education, maternal age, Adequacy of Prenatal Care Utilization Index, and obstetric comorbidity index., Results: From a sample of 8 693 616 patients (mean [SD] age, 28.5 [6.1] years), 956 951 were Black individuals (11.0%), of whom 3586 (0.37%) had SCD. Black individuals with SCD vs Black individuals without SCD were more likely to have Medicaid insurance (70.2% vs 64.6%), to have a cesarean delivery (44.6% vs 34.0%), and to reside in South Carolina (25.2% vs 21.5%). Sickle cell disease accounted for 8.9% and for 14.3% of the Black-White disparity in SMM and nontransfusion SMM, respectively. Among Black individuals, SCD complicated 0.37% of the pregnancies but contributed to 4.3% of the SMM cases and to 6.9% of the nontransfusion SMM cases. Among Black individuals with SCD compared with those without, the crude RRs of SMM and nontransfusion SMM during the delivery hospitalization were 11.9 (95% CI, 11.3-12.5) and 19.8 (95% CI, 18.5-21.2), respectively, while the adjusted RRs were 3.8 (95% CI, 3.3-4.5) and 6.5 (95% CI, 5.3-8.0), respectively. The SMM indicators that incurred the highest adjusted RRs included air and thrombotic embolism (4.8; 95% CI, 2.9-7.8), puerperal cerebrovascular disorders (4.7; 95% CI, 3.0-7.4), and blood transfusion (3.7; 95% CI, 3.2-4.3)., Conclusions and Relevance: In this retrospective cohort study, SCD was found to be an important contributor to racial disparities in SMM and was associated with an elevated risk of SMM among Black individuals. Efforts from the research community, policy makers, and funding agencies are needed to advance care among individuals with SCD.
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- 2023
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38. Physical Fitness in Relationship to Depression and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder During Pregnancy Among U.S. Army Soldiers.
- Author
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Panelli DM, Nelson DA, Wagner S, Shaw JG, Phibbs CS, and Kurina LM
- Subjects
- Pregnancy, Humans, Female, Depression epidemiology, Depression psychology, Retrospective Studies, Physical Fitness, Military Personnel psychology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic psychology
- Abstract
Background: Depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are prevalent in pregnancy, especially among military members. These conditions can lead to adverse birth outcomes, yet, there's a paucity of evidence for prevention strategies. Optimizing physical fitness is one understudied potential intervention. We explored associations between prepregnancy physical fitness and antenatal depression and PTSD in soldiers. Materials and Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study of active-duty U.S. Army soldiers with live births between 2011 and 2014, identified with diagnosis codes from inpatient and outpatient care. The exposure was each individual's mean Army physical fitness score from 10 to 24 months before childbirth. The primary outcome was a composite of active depression or PTSD during pregnancy, defined using the presence of a code within 10 months before childbirth. Demographic variables were compared across four quartiles of fitness scores. Multivariable logistic regression models were conducted adjusting for potential confounders selected a priori . A stratified analysis was conducted for depression and PTSD separately. Results: Among 4,583 eligible live births, 352 (7.7%) had active depression or PTSD during pregnancy. Soldiers with the highest fitness scores (Quartile 4) were less likely to have active depression or PTSD in pregnancy (Quartile 4 vs. Quartile 1 adjusted odds ratio 0.55, 95% confidence interval 0.39-0.79). Findings were similar in stratified analyses. Conclusion: In this cohort, the odds of active depression or PTSD during pregnancy were significantly reduced among soldiers with higher prepregnancy fitness scores. Optimizing physical fitness may be a useful tool to reduce mental health burden on pregnancy.
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- 2023
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39. Obstetric Volume and Severe Maternal Morbidity Among Low-Risk and Higher-Risk Patients Giving Birth at Rural and Urban US Hospitals.
- Author
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Kozhimannil KB, Leonard SA, Handley SC, Passarella M, Main EK, Lorch SA, and Phibbs CS
- Subjects
- Female, Pregnancy, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Hospitals, Rural, Rural Population, Parturition
- Abstract
Importance: Identifying hospital factors associated with severe maternal morbidity (SMM) is essential to clinical and policy efforts., Objective: To assess associations between obstetric volume and SMM in rural and urban hospitals and examine whether these associations differ for low-risk and higher-risk patients., Design, Setting, and Participants: This retrospective cross-sectional study of linked vital statistics and patient discharge data was conducted from 2022 to 2023. Live births and stillbirths (≥20 weeks' gestation) at hospitals in California (2004-2018), Michigan (2004-2020), Pennsylvania (2004-2014), and South Carolina (2004-2020) were included. Data were analyzed from December 2022 to May 2023., Exposures: Annual birth volume categories (low, medium, medium-high, and high) for hospitals in urban (10-500, 501-1000, 1001-2000, and >2000) and rural (10-110, 111-240, 241-460, and >460) counties., Main Outcome and Measures: The main outcome was SMM (excluding blood transfusion); covariates included age, payer status, educational attainment, race and ethnicity, and obstetric comorbidities. Analyses were stratified for low-risk and higher-risk obstetric patients based on presence of at least 1 clinical comorbidity., Results: Among more than 11 million urban births and 519 953 rural births, rates of SMM ranged from 0.73% to 0.50% across urban hospital volume categories (high to low) and from 0.47% to 0.70% across rural hospital volume categories (high to low). Risk of SMM was elevated for patients who gave birth at rural hospitals with annual birth volume of 10 to 110 (adjusted risk ratio [ARR], 1.65; 95% CI, 1.14-2.39), 111 to 240 (ARR, 1.37; 95% CI, 1.10-1.70), and 241 to 460 (ARR, 1.26; 95% CI, 1.05-1.51), compared with rural hospitals with greater than 460 births. Increased risk of SMM occurred for low-risk and higher-risk obstetric patients who delivered at rural hospitals with lower birth volumes, with low-risk rural patients having notable discrepancies in SMM risk between low (ARR, 2.32; 95% CI, 1.32-4.07), medium (ARR, 1.66; 95% CI, 1.20-2.28), and medium-high (ARR, 1.68; 95% CI, 1.29-2.18) volume hospitals compared with high volume (>460 births) rural hospitals. Among hospitals in urban counties, there was no significant association between birth volume and SMM for low-risk or higher-risk obstetric patients., Conclusions and Relevance: In this cross-sectional study of births in US rural and urban counties, risk of SMM was elevated for low-risk and higher-risk obstetric patients who gave birth in lower-volume hospitals in rural counties, compared with similar patients who gave birth at rural hospitals with greater than 460 annual births. These findings imply a need for tailored quality improvement strategies for lower volume hospitals in rural communities.
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- 2023
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40. Racial/ethnic disparities in costs, length of stay, and severity of severe maternal morbidity.
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Phibbs CM, Kristensen-Cabrera A, Kozhimannil KB, Leonard SA, Lorch SA, Main EK, Schmitt SK, and Phibbs CS
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Pregnancy, Asian American Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander statistics & numerical data, Birth Certificates, Black or African American statistics & numerical data, California epidemiology, Health Disparate Minority and Vulnerable Populations statistics & numerical data, Health Status Disparities, Hispanic or Latino statistics & numerical data, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Patient Discharge statistics & numerical data, Racial Groups statistics & numerical data, United States epidemiology, White statistics & numerical data, Delivery, Obstetric economics, Delivery, Obstetric statistics & numerical data, Healthcare Disparities economics, Healthcare Disparities ethnology, Healthcare Disparities statistics & numerical data, Morbidity, Mothers statistics & numerical data, Patient Acuity, Population Groups, US ethnology, Population Groups, US statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: In contrast to other high-resource countries, the United States has experienced increases in the rates of severe maternal morbidity. In addition, the United States has pronounced racial and ethnic disparities in severe maternal morbidity, especially for non-Hispanic Black people, who have twice the rate as non-Hispanic White people., Objective: This study aimed to examine whether the racial and ethnic disparities in severe maternal morbidity extended beyond the rates of these complications to include disparities in maternal costs and lengths of stay, which could indicate differences in the case severity., Study Design: This study used California's linkage of birth certificates to inpatient maternal and infant discharge data for 2009 to 2011. Of the 1.5 million linked records, 250,000 were excluded because of incomplete data, for a final sample of 1,262,862. Cost-to-charge ratios were used to estimate costs from charges (including readmissions) after adjusting for inflation to December 2017. Mean diagnosis-related group-specific reimbursement was used to estimate physician payments. We used the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention definition of severe maternal morbidity, including readmissions up to 42 days after delivery. Adjusted Poisson regression models estimated the differential risk of severe maternal morbidity for each racial or ethnic group, compared with the non-Hispanic White group. Generalized linear models estimated the associations of race and ethnicity with costs and length of stay., Results: Asian or Pacific Islander, Non-Hispanic Black, Hispanic, and other race or ethnicity patients all had higher rates of severe maternal morbidity than non-Hispanic White patients. The largest disparity was between non-Hispanic White and non-Hispanic Black patients, with unadjusted overall rates of severe maternal morbidity of 1.34% and 2.62%, respectively (adjusted risk ratio, 1.61; P<.001). Among patients with severe maternal morbidity, the adjusted regression estimates showed that non-Hispanic Black patients had 23% (P<.001) higher costs (marginal effect of $5023) and 24% (P<.001) longer hospital stays (marginal effect of 1.4 days) than non-Hispanic White patients. These effects changed when cases, such as cases where a blood transfusion was the only indication of severe maternal morbidity, were excluded, with 29% higher costs (P<.001) and 15% longer length of stay (P<.001). For other racial and ethnic groups, the increases in costs and length of stay were smaller than those observed for non-Hispanic Black patients, and many were not significantly different from non-Hispanic White patients. Hispanic patients had higher rates of severe maternal morbidity than non-Hispanic White patients; however, Hispanic patients had significantly lower costs and length of stay than non-Hispanic White patients., Conclusion: There were racial and ethnic differences in the costs and length of stay among patients with severe maternal morbidity across the groupings that we examined. The differences were especially large for non-Hispanic Black patients compared with non-Hispanic White patients. Non-Hispanic Black patients experienced twice the rate of severe maternal morbidity; in addition, the higher relative costs and longer lengths of stay for non-Hispanic Black patients with severe maternal morbidity support greater case severity in that population. These findings suggest that efforts to address racial and ethnic inequities in maternal health need to consider differences in case severity in addition to the differences in the rates of severe maternal morbidity and that these differences in case severity merit additional investigation., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2023
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41. Trends in Resources for Neonatal Intensive Care at Delivery Hospitals for Infants Born Younger Than 30 Weeks' Gestation, 2009-2020.
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Boghossian NS, Geraci M, Phibbs CS, Lorch SA, Edwards EM, and Horbar JD
- Subjects
- Infant, Newborn, Female, Infant, Male, Humans, Adult, Gestational Age, Retrospective Studies, Hospitals, Intensive Care, Neonatal, Intensive Care Units, Neonatal
- Abstract
Importance: In an ideal regionalized system, all infants born very preterm would be delivered at a large tertiary hospital capable of providing all necessary care., Objective: To examine whether the distribution of extremely preterm births changed between 2009 and 2020 based on neonatal intensive care resources at the delivery hospital., Design, Setting, and Participants: This retrospective cohort study was conducted at 822 Vermont Oxford Network (VON) centers in the US between 2009 and 2020. Participants included infants born at 22 to 29 weeks' gestation, delivered at or transferred to centers participating in the VON. Data were analyzed from February to December 2022., Exposures: Hospital of birth at 22 to 29 weeks' gestation., Main Outcomes and Measures: Birthplace neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) level was classified as A, restriction on assisted ventilation or no surgery; B, major surgery; or C, cardiac surgery requiring bypass. Level B centers were further divided into low-volume (<50 inborn infants at 22 to 29 weeks' gestation per year) and high-volume (≥50 inborn infants at 22 to 29 weeks' gestation per year) centers. High-volume level B and level C centers were combined, resulting in 3 distinct NICU categories: level A, low-volume B, and high-volume B and C NICUs. The main outcome was the change in the percentage of births at hospitals with level A, low-volume B, and high-volume B or C NICUs overall and by US Census region., Results: A total of 357 181 infants (mean [SD] gestational age, 26.4 [2.1] weeks; 188 761 [52.9%] male) were included in the analysis. Across regions, the Pacific (20 239 births [38.3%]) had the lowest while the South Atlantic (48 348 births [62.7%]) had the highest percentage of births at a hospital with a high-volume B- or C-level NICU. Births at hospitals with A-level NICUs increased by 5.6% (95% CI, 4.3% to 7.0%), and births at low-volume B-level NICUs increased by 3.6% (95% CI, 2.1% to 5.0%), while births at hospitals with high-volume B- or C-level NICUs decreased by 9.2% (95% CI, -10.3% to -8.1%). By 2020, less than half of the births for infants at 22 to 29 weeks' gestation occurred at hospitals with high-volume B- or C-level NICUs. Most US Census regions followed the nationwide trends; for example, births at hospitals with high-volume B- or C-level NICUs decreased by 10.9% [95% CI, -14.0% to -7.8%) in the East North Central region and by 21.1% (95% CI, -24.0% to -18.2%) in the West South Central region., Conclusions and Relevance: This retrospective cohort study identified concerning deregionalization trends in birthplace hospital level of care for infants born at 22 to 29 weeks' gestation. These findings should serve to encourage policy makers to identify and enforce strategies to ensure that infants at the highest risk of adverse outcomes are born at the hospitals where they have the best chances to attain optimal outcomes.
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- 2023
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42. An exploratory analysis of factors associated with spontaneous preterm birth among pregnant veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder.
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Panelli DM, Chan CS, Shaw JG, Shankar M, Kimerling R, Frayne SM, Herrero TC, Lyell DJ, and Phibbs CS
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- Pregnancy, Female, Infant, Newborn, Humans, Antidepressive Agents therapeutic use, Premature Birth epidemiology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic complications, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic epidemiology, Pre-Eclampsia chemically induced, Pre-Eclampsia epidemiology, Veterans, Eclampsia chemically induced
- Abstract
Background: Pregnant veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are at increased risk for spontaneous preterm birth, yet the underlying reasons are unclear. We examined factors associated with spontaneous preterm birth among pregnant veterans with active PTSD., Methods: This was an observational study of births from administrative databases reimbursed by the Veterans Health Association (VA) between 2005 and 2015. Singleton livebirths among veterans with active PTSD within 12 months prior to childbirth were included. The primary outcome was spontaneous preterm birth. Maternal demographics, psychiatric history, and pregnancy complications were evaluated as exposures. Covariates significant on bivariate analysis, as well as age and race/ethnicity as a social construct, were included in multivariable logistic regression to identify factors associated with spontaneous preterm birth. Additional analyses stratified significant covariates by the presence of active concurrent depression and explored interactions between antidepressant use and preeclampsia., Results: Of 3,242 eligible births to veterans with active PTSD, 249 (7.7%) were spontaneous preterm births. The majority of veterans with active PTSD (79.1%) received some type of mental health treatment, and active concurrent depression was prevalent (61.4%). Preeclampsia/eclampsia (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 3.30, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.67-6.54) and ≥6 antidepressant medication dispensations within 12 months prior to childbirth (aOR 1.89, 95% CI 1.29-2.77) were associated with spontaneous preterm birth. No evidence of interaction was seen between antidepressant use and preeclampsia on spontaneous preterm birth (p=0.39). Findings were similar when stratified by active concurrent depression., Conclusion: Among veterans with active PTSD, preeclampsia/eclampsia and ≥6 antidepressant dispensations were associated with spontaneous preterm birth. While the results do not imply that people should discontinue needed antidepressants during pregnancy in veterans with PTSD, research into these factors might inform preterm birth prevention strategies for this high-risk population., Competing Interests: DISCLOSURE: The authors report no conflict of interest.
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- 2023
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43. Hospital variation in extremely preterm birth.
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Goldstein GP, Kan P, Phibbs CS, Main E, Shaw GM, and Lee HC
- Subjects
- Infant, Female, Infant, Newborn, Humans, Infant, Extremely Premature, Hospitals, Odds Ratio, Premature Birth epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: Given that regionalization of extremely preterm births (EPTBs) is associated with improved infant outcomes, we assessed between-hospital variation in EPTB stratified by hospital level of neonatal care, and determined the proportion of variance explained by differences in maternal and hospital factors., Study Design: We assessed 7,046,253 births in California from 1997 to 2011, using hospital discharge, birth, and death certificate data. We estimated the association between maternal and hospital factors and EPTB using multivariable regression, calculated hospital-specific EPTB frequencies, and estimated between-hospital variances and median odds ratios, stratified by hospital level of care., Result: Hospital frequencies of EPTB ranged from 0% to 2.5%. Between-hospital EPTB frequencies varied substantially, despite stratifying by hospital level of care and accounting for confounding factors., Conclusion: Our results demonstrate differences in EPTBs among hospitals with level 1 and 2 neonatal care, an area to target for future research and quality improvement., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.)
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- 2022
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44. Successful Discharge of Short Stay Veterans from VA Community Living Centers.
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Gozalo PL, Inrator O, Phibbs CS, Kinosian B, and Allen SM
- Subjects
- Humans, Long-Term Care, Patient Discharge, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans
- Abstract
The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) long-term care rebalancing initiative encouraged VA Community Living Centers (CLCs) to shift from long-stay custodial-focused care to short-stay skilled and rehabilitative care. Using all VA CLC admissions during 2007-2010 categorized as needing short-stay rehabilitation or skilled nursing care, we assessed the patient and facility rates of successful discharge to the community (SDC) of these short-stay Veterans. We found large variation in inter- as well as intra- facility SDC rates across the rehabilitation and skilled nursing short-stay cohorts. We discuss how our results can help guide VHA policy directed at delivering high-quality short-stay CLC care for Veterans.
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- 2022
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45. Gynecologist Supply Deserts Across the VA and in the Community.
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Friedman S, Shaw JG, Hamilton AB, Vinekar K, Washington DL, Mattocks K, Yano EM, Phibbs CS, Johnson AM, Saechao F, Berg E, and Frayne SM
- Subjects
- Ambulatory Care Facilities, Female, Health Services Accessibility, Hospitals, Veterans, Humans, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Gynecology, Veterans
- Abstract
Background: The Veterans Health Administration (VA) refers patients to community providers for specialty services not available on-site. However, community-level specialist shortages may impede access to care., Objective: Compare gynecologist supply in veterans' county of residence versus at their VA site., Design: We identified women veteran VA patients from fiscal year (FY) 2017 administrative data and assessed availability of a VA gynecologist within 50 miles (hereafter called "local") of veterans' VA homesites (per national VA organizational survey data). For the same cohort, we then assessed community-level gynecologist availability; counties with < 2 gynecologists/10,000 women (per the Area Health Resource File) were "inadequate-supply" counties. We examined the proportion of women veterans with local VA gynecologist availability in counties with inadequate versus adequate gynecologist supply, stratified by individual and VA homesite characteristics. Chi-square tests assessed statistical differences., Participants: All women veteran FY2017 VA primary care users nationally., Main Measures: Availability of a VA gynecologist within 50 miles of a veteran's VA homesite; county-level "inadequate-supply" of gynecologists., Key Results: Among 407,482 women, 9% were in gynecologist supply deserts (i.e., lacking local VA gynecologist and living in an inadequate-supply county). The sub-populations with the highest proportions in gynecologist supply deserts were rural residents (24%), those who got their primary care at non-VAMC satellite clinics (13%), those who got their care at a site without a women's clinic (13%), and those with American Indian or Alaska Native (12%), or white (12%) race. Among those in inadequate-supply counties, 59.9% had gynecologists at their local VA; however, 40.1% lacked a local VA gynecologist., Conclusions: Most veterans living in inadequate-supply counties had local VA gynecology care, reflecting VA's critical role as a safety net provider. However, for those in gynecologist supply deserts, expanded transportation options, modified staffing models, or tele-gynecology hubs may offer solutions to extend VA gynecology capacity., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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46. Evaluating implementation strategies to support documentation of veterans' care preferences.
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Carpenter JG, Scott WJ, Kononowech J, Foglia MB, Haverhals LM, Hogikyan R, Kolanowski A, Landis-Lewis Z, Levy C, Miller SC, Periyakoil VJ, Phibbs CS, Potter L, Sales A, and Ersek M
- Subjects
- Documentation, Evidence-Based Practice, Humans, Patient Care Planning, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of feedback reports and feedback reports + external facilitation on completion of life-sustaining treatment (LST) note the template and durable medical orders. This quality improvement program supported the national roll-out of the Veterans Health Administration (VA) LST Decisions Initiative (LSTDI), which aims to ensure that seriously-ill veterans have care goals and LST decisions elicited and documented., Data Sources: Primary data from national databases for VA nursing homes (called Community Living Centers [CLCs]) from 2018 to 2020., Study Design: In one project, we distributed monthly feedback reports summarizing LST template completion rates to 12 sites as the sole implementation strategy. In the second involving five sites, we distributed similar feedback reports and provided robust external facilitation, which included coaching, education, and learning collaboratives. For each project, principal component analyses matched intervention to comparison sites, and interrupted time series/segmented regression analyses evaluated the differences in LSTDI template completion rates between intervention and comparison sites., Data Collection Methods: Data were extracted from national databases in addition to interviews and surveys in a mixed-methods process evaluation., Principal Findings: LSTDI template completion rose from 0% to about 80% throughout the study period in both projects' intervention and comparison CLCs. There were small but statistically significant differences for feedback reports alone (comparison sites performed better, coefficient estimate 3.48, standard error 0.99 for the difference between groups in change in trend) and feedback reports + external facilitation (intervention sites performed better, coefficient estimate -2.38, standard error 0.72)., Conclusions: Feedback reports + external facilitation was associated with a small but statistically significant improvement in outcomes compared with comparison sites. The large increases in completion rates are likely due to the well-planned national roll-out of the LSTDI. This finding suggests that when dissemination and support for widespread implementation are present and system-mandated, significant enhancements in the adoption of evidence-based practices may require more intensive support., (© 2022 Health Research and Educational Trust.)
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- 2022
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47. Timeliness and Adequacy of Prenatal Care Among Department of Veterans Affairs-Enrolled Veterans: The First Step May Be the Biggest Hurdle.
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Katon JG, Shaw JG, Joyce VR, Schmitt SK, and Phibbs CS
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- Female, Humans, Medicaid, Pregnancy, Prenatal Care, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Maternal Health Services, Veterans
- Abstract
Introduction: Little is known about access to and use of prenatal care by veterans using U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) maternity benefits. We compared the timeliness and adequacy of prenatal care by veteran status and payor., Study Design: We used VA clinical and admistrative data linked with California vital statistics patient discharge data to identify all births to VA-enrolled veterans and non-veterans between 2000 and 2012. Births were categorized based on veteran status and payor (non-veterans with Medicaid, non-veterans with private insurance, VA-enrolled veterans using VA maternity care benefits, and VA-enrolled veterans with other payor). Outcomes were timeliness of prenatal care (initiation before the end of the first trimester) and adequacy of prenatal care as measured by the Kotelchuck Index (inadequate, intermediate, adequate). Covariates included demographic, health, and pregnancy characteristics. We used generalized linear models and multinomial logistic regression to analyze the association of veteran status and payor with timeliness of prenatal care and adequacy of prenatal care, respectively., Results: We identified 6,196,432 births among VA-enrolled veterans (n = 17,495) and non-veterans (n = 6,178,937). Non-veterans using Medicaid had the lowest percentage of timely prenatal care (78.1%; n = 2,240,326), followed by VA-enrolled veterans using VA maternity care benefits (82.8%; n = 1,248). VA-enrolled veterans using VA maternity care benefits were the most likely to receive adequate prenatal care (92.0%; n = 1,365). Results remained consistent after adjustment., Conclusions: This study provides key baseline data regarding access to and use of prenatal care by veterans using VA maternity benefits. Longitudinal studies including more recent data are needed to understand the impact of changing VA policy., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2022
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48. A Comprehensive Analysis of the Costs of Severe Maternal Morbidity.
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Phibbs CM, Kozhimannil KB, Leonard SA, Lorch SA, Main EK, Schmitt SK, and Phibbs CS
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- Cost-Benefit Analysis, Female, Humans, Length of Stay, Patient Discharge, Pregnancy, Retrospective Studies, Hospital Costs, Patient Readmission
- Abstract
Introduction: The objectives of this study were to include readmissions and physician costs in the estimates of total costs of severe maternal morbidity (SMM), to consider the effect of SMM on maternal length of stay (LOS), and to examine these for the more restricted definition of SMM that excludes transfusion-only cases., Methods: California linked birth certificate-patient discharge data for 2009 through 2011 (n = 1,262,862) with complete costs and LOS were used in a secondary data analysis. Cost-to-charge ratios were used to estimate costs from charges, adjusting for inflation. Physician payments were estimated from the mean payments for specific diagnosis-related groups. Generalized linear models estimated the association between SMM and costs and LOS., Results: Excluding readmissions and physician costs, SMM was associated with a 60% increase in hospital costs (marginal effect [ME] $3,550) and a 33% increase in LOS (ME 0.9 days). These increased to 70% (ME $5,806) and 46% (ME 1.3 days) when physician costs and readmissions were included. The effects of SMM were roughly one-half as large for patients who only required a blood transfusion (49% [ME $4,056] and 31% [ME 0.9 days]) as for patients who had another indicator for SMM (93% [ME $7,664] and 62% [ME 1.7 days])., Conclusions: Postpartum hospital readmissions and physician costs are important and previously unreported contributors to the costs of SMM. Excess costs and LOS associated with SMM vary considerably by indication. Cost effects were larger than the LOS effects, indicating that SMM increases treatment intensity beyond increasing LOS, and decreasing SMM may have broader health and cost benefits than previously understood., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2022
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49. Health Care Access Expansions and Use of Veterans Affairs and Other Hospitals by Veterans.
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Yoon J, Kizer KW, Ong MK, Zhang Y, Vanneman ME, Chow A, and Phibbs CS
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- Cohort Studies, Health Services Accessibility, Hospitals, Humans, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans
- Abstract
This cohort study examines changes in the use of Veterans Affairs (VA) and non-VA hospitals by VA enrollees and mortality associated with these policies., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest Disclosures: Dr Vanneman reported grants from VA Health Services Research & Development Service during the conduct of the study. Dr Phibbs reported grants from the US Department of Veterans Affairs during the conduct of the study. No other disclosures were reported., (Copyright 2022 Yoon J et al. JAMA Health Forum.)
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- 2022
- Full Text
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50. Understanding the relative contributions of prematurity and congenital anomalies to neonatal mortality.
- Author
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Phibbs CS, Passarella M, Schmitt SK, Rogowski JA, and Lorch SA
- Subjects
- Female, Gestational Age, Humans, Infant, Infant Mortality, Infant, Low Birth Weight, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Premature, Retrospective Studies, Infant, Newborn, Diseases, Infant, Premature, Diseases, Perinatal Death
- Abstract
Objective: To examine the relative contributions of preterm delivery and congenital anomalies to neonatal mortality., Study Design: Retrospective analysis of 2009-2011 linked birth cohort-hospital discharge files for California, Missouri, Pennsylvania and South Carolina. Deaths were classified by gestational age and three definitions of congenital anomaly: any ICD-9 code for an anomaly, any anomaly with a significant mortality risk, and anomalies recorded on the death certificate., Result: In total, 59% of the deaths had an ICD-9 code for an anomaly, only 43% had a potentially fatal anomaly, and only 34% had a death certificate anomaly. Preterm infants (<37 weeks GA) accounted for 80% of deaths; those preterm infants without a potentially fatal anomaly diagnosis comprised 53% of all neonatal deaths. The share of preterm deaths with a potentially fatal anomaly decreases with GA., Conclusion: Congenital anomalies are responsible for about 40% of neonatal deaths while preterm without anomalies are responsible for over 50%., (© 2021. This is a U.S. government work and not under copyright protection in the U.S.; foreign copyright protection may apply.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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