Prediction of Readmissions After CABG Using Detailed Follow-Up Data
- 1 July 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Medical Care
- Vol. 37 (7) , 625-636
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005650-199907000-00002
Abstract
Objective. To use detailed pre-discharge follow-up data to predict readmissions within 3 months after Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting (CABG). Settings and Design. A prospective nationwide study (ISCAB) of 4,835 patients undergoing isolated CABG in Israel in 1994. Survivors of the initial hospitalization were candidates for the readmission study. Methods. Patient information was prospectively collected from preoperative interviews and hospital follow-up. Readmissions' data were obtained from the National Hospital Admission Registry. Logistic and multinomial models were constructed for total and cause-specific readmissions, respectively. Results. Of CABG survivors, 1,094 (24.1%) were rehospitalized within 3 months of the original surgery. Significant multivariate predictors of total readmissions included the following: preoperative co-morbidities; operative factors; immediate post-operative complications and socio-demographic characteristics as well as provider characteristics. However, the logistic model had low predictive power (c-statistic = 0.65). The heterogeneous reasons for readmissions were classified into specific serious cardiac diagnoses (19.0%), other cardiac reasons (35.4%), specific infections at the site of the operation (10.2%), other infections (7.3%), and various other reasons (23.0%). The multinomial model for cause-specific readmissions caused by either serious cardiac reasons or wound infection had a higher predictive value (c-statistics of 0.75, 0.72, respectively). Conclusions. Total readmissions after CABG in Israel were difficult to predict, even with an extensive pre-discharge follow-up data. We propose that reasons for readmission vary from true emergencies to nonspecific causes, with the latter related to a lack of support services in the community. We suggest that cause-specific rehospitalizations could be a better outcome for evaluating quality of care.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Association Between the Quality of Inpatient Care and Early ReadmissionMedical Care, 1997
- A conceptual framework for the study of early readmission as an indicator of quality of careSocial Science & Medicine, 1996
- Can Early Re-Admission Rates Accurately Detect Poor-Quality Hospitals?Medical Care, 1995
- Selecting Disease-Outcome Pairs for Monitoring the Quality of Hospital CareMedical Care, 1995
- Discordance of Databases Designed for Claims Payment versus Clinical Information Systems: Implications for Outcomes ResearchAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1993
- Predictors of Hospital ReadmissionEvaluation & the Health Professions, 1991
- Investigating Early Readmission as an Indicator for Quality of Care StudiesMedical Care, 1991
- Can readmission rates be used as an outcome indicator?BMJ, 1990
- Monitoring hospital readmissionsCleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine, 1989
- Using Administrative Data to Predict Important Health Outcomes: Entry to Hospital, Nursing Home, and DeathMedical Care, 1988