miércoles, 5 de abril de 2017

Diagnostic Testing and Hospital Outcomes of Children with Neurologic Impairment and Bacterial Pneumonia. - PubMed - NCBI

Diagnostic Testing and Hospital Outcomes of Children with Neurologic Impairment and Bacterial Pneumonia. - PubMed - NCBI



 2016 Nov;178:156-163.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2016.07.024. Epub 2016 Aug 22.

Diagnostic Testing and Hospital Outcomes of Children with Neurologic Impairment and Bacterial Pneumonia.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:

To assess hospital-level variability in diagnostic testing and outcomes for children with neurologic impairment hospitalized with pneumonia.

STUDY DESIGN:

A retrospective cohort study of 27 455 children ages 1-18 years with neurologic impairment hospitalized with pneumonia at 39 children's hospitals. K-means clustering was used to assign each hospital to 1 of 3 groups (termed A, B, and C) based on similar diagnostic testing patterns. Outcomes of hospital-level median length of stay (LOS), 30-day readmissions, and pneumonia-associated complications were compared while controlling for patient differences.

RESULTS:

Overall, 48.5% had comorbid complex chronic conditions, and 25.4% were assisted with medical technology. Outcomes and diagnostic testing varied across hospitals: median hospital-level LOS, 3.2 days (IQR 2.8-3.8); median readmission, 8.4% (IQR 6.8,-10.0); and median pneumonia-associated complication rate, 23.1% (IQR 18.7-26.8). Despite similar populations, hospitals in group A tended to perform fewer tests than those in groups B and C. Across hospital groups, there was a significant difference in adjusted readmission rates (group A 7.2%, group B 9.0%, group C 7.7%, P = .003). There was no significant difference in adjusted median LOS (group A 3.4 days, group B 3.2 days, group C 3.3 days, P = .3) or adjusted pneumonia-associated complication rates (group A 22.5%, group B 22.5%, group C 25.0%, P = .6).

CONCLUSIONS:

For children with neurologic impairment hospitalized with pneumonia, across hospital differences in diagnostic testing were not associated with clinically meaningful differences in outcomes. High-utilizing hospitals may be able to decrease diagnostic testing for children with neurologic impairment hospitalized with pneumonia without adversely impacting outcomes.

KEYWORDS:

children with neurologic impairment; pneumonia; variation

PMID:
 
27562921
 
PMCID:
 
PMC5085856
 [Available on 2017-11-01]
 
DOI:
 
10.1016/j.jpeds.2016.07.024

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