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Association of Sociodemographic Factors With Overtriage, Undertriage, and Value of Care After Major Surgery

Authors :
Tyler J. Loftus, MD
Matthew M. Ruppert, MS
Benjamin Shickel, PhD
Tezcan Ozrazgat-Baslanti, PhD
Jeremy A. Balch, MD
Kenneth L. Abbott, MD
Die Hu, MS
Adnan Javed, MD
Firas Madbak, MD
Faheem Guirgis, MD
David Skarupa, MD
Philip A. Efron, MD
Patrick J. Tighe, MD
William R. Hogan, MD
Parisa Rashidi, PhD
Gilbert R. Upchurch, Jr, MD
Azra Bihorac, MD
Source :
Annals of Surgery Open, Vol 5, Iss 2, p e429 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Wolters Kluwer Health, 2024.

Abstract

Objective:. To determine whether certain patients are vulnerable to errant triage decisions immediately after major surgery and whether there are unique sociodemographic phenotypes within overtriaged and undertriaged cohorts. Background:. In a fair system, overtriage of low-acuity patients to intensive care units (ICUs) and undertriage of high-acuity patients to general wards would affect all sociodemographic subgroups equally. Methods:. This multicenter, longitudinal cohort study of hospital admissions immediately after major surgery compared hospital mortality and value of care (risk-adjusted mortality/total costs) across 4 cohorts: overtriage (N = 660), risk-matched overtriage controls admitted to general wards (N = 3077), undertriage (N = 2335), and risk-matched undertriage controls admitted to ICUs (N = 4774). K-means clustering identified sociodemographic phenotypes within overtriage and undertriage cohorts. Results:. Compared with controls, overtriaged admissions had a predominance of male patients (56.2% vs 43.1%, P < 0.001) and commercial insurance (6.4% vs 2.5%, P < 0.001); undertriaged admissions had a predominance of Black patients (28.4% vs 24.4%, P < 0.001) and greater socioeconomic deprivation. Overtriage was associated with increased total direct costs [$16.2K ($11.4K–$23.5K) vs $14.1K ($9.1K–$20.7K), P < 0.001] and low value of care; undertriage was associated with increased hospital mortality (1.5% vs 0.7%, P = 0.002) and hospice care (2.2% vs 0.6%, P < 0.001) and low value of care. Unique sociodemographic phenotypes within both overtriage and undertriage cohorts had similar outcomes and value of care, suggesting that triage decisions, rather than patient characteristics, drive outcomes and value of care. Conclusions:. Postoperative triage decisions should ensure equality across sociodemographic groups by anchoring triage decisions to objective patient acuity assessments, circumventing cognitive shortcuts and mitigating bias.

Subjects

Subjects :
Surgery
RD1-811

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26913593 and 00000000
Volume :
5
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Annals of Surgery Open
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.61e92eec95a4e538b624f9469e1d686
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/AS9.0000000000000429