Explaining Trends in Hospitalizations for Pneumonia and Influenza in the Elderly
- 1 October 2005
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Medical Care Research and Review
- Vol. 62 (5) , 560-582
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1077558705279310
Abstract
From 1987–99, influenza and pneumococcal vaccination rates among elderly Medicare beneficiaries increased by 300 percent and 500 percent, respectively. Despite these gains, annual rates of hospitalizations for pneumonia and influenza (P&I) have not decreased; rather, they have increased steadily. The authors investigate whether this paradoxical increase in hospitalization rates reflects an increasing burden of P&I or the effects of a changing healthcare environment. They find that from 1987–99, P&I hospitalizations per one thousand beneficiaries increased from 15.1 to 23.4. Of this increase, 23 percent was due to an aging Medicare population, 2.4 percent was due to increased rates of rehospitalization, and at most 5 percent was due to upcoding. There was no evidence that physicians were increasingly admitting patients with less complicated cases of P&I. The changing healthcare environment only partially explained the paradoxical increase in P&I hospitalizations. P&I appears to be an increasing burden to the elderly, despite increased vaccination rates.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Influenza-Associated Hospitalizations in the United StatesJAMA, 2004
- Trends In Avoidable Hospitalizations, 1980–1998Health Affairs, 2001
- Pneumococcal Disease in the ElderlyDrugs & Aging, 2001
- Community‐Acquired Pneumonia in the ElderlyClinical Infectious Diseases, 2000
- The Impact of Influenza Epidemics on HospitalizationsThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2000
- Secondary Diagnoses as Predictive Factors for Survival or Mortality in Medicare Patients with Acute PneumoniaAmerican Journal of Medical Quality, 1996
- Hospital response to prospective payment: Moral hazard, selection, and practice-style effectsJournal of Health Economics, 1996
- Adapting a clinical comorbidity index for use with ICD-9-CM administrative databasesJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1992
- How much change in the Case Mix Index is DRG creep?Journal of Health Economics, 1990
- Hospital nonprice competition and medicare reimbursement policyJournal of Health Economics, 1989