Medicaid Markets and Pediatric Patient Safety in Hospitals
- 16 February 2007
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Health Services Research
- Vol. 42 (5) , 1981-1998
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-6773.2007.00698.x
Abstract
To examine the association of Medicaid market characteristics to potentially preventable adverse medical events for hospitalized children, controlling for patient- and hospital-level factors. Two carefully selected Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) pediatric patient safety indicators (decubitus ulcers and laceration) are analyzed using the new pediatric-specific, risk-adjusting, patient safety algorithm from the AHRQ. All pediatric hospital discharges for patients age 0-17 in Florida, New York, and Wisconsin, and at risk of any of these two patient safety events, are examined for the years 1999-2001 (N=859,922). Logistic regression on the relevant pool of discharges estimates the probability an individual patient experiences one of the two PSI events. Pediatric discharges from the 1999 to 2001 State Inpatient Databases (SIDs) from the AHRQ Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project, merged with hospital-level data from the American Hospital Association's Annual Survey, Medicaid data obtained from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and state Medicaid offices, and private and Medicaid managed care enrollment data obtained from InterStudy, are used in the estimations. At the market level, patients in markets in which Medicaid payers face relatively little competition are more likely to experience a patient safety event (odds ratio [OR]=1.602), while patients in markets in which hospitals face relatively little competition are less likely to experience an adverse event (OR=0.686). At the patient-discharge and hospital levels, Medicaid characteristics are not significantly associated with the incidence of a pediatric patient safety event. Our analysis offers additional insights to previous work and suggests a new factor--the Medicaid-payer market--as relevant to the issue of pediatric patient safety.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Commercial Plans In Medicaid Managed Care: Understanding Who Stays And Who LeavesHealth Affairs, 2005
- Dissemination of Evidence-based Practice Center ReportsAnnals of Internal Medicine, 2005
- Hospital Finances and Patient Safety OutcomesINQUIRY: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing, 2005
- Health Care for Children and Youth in the United States: Annual Report on Patterns of Coverage, Utilization, Quality, and Expenditures by IncomeAcademic Pediatrics, 2005
- Relevance of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Patient Safety Indicators for Children's HospitalsPublished by American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) ,2005
- Consolidation And The Transformation Of Competition In Health InsuranceHealth Affairs, 2004
- Pediatric Patient Safety in Hospitals: A National Picture in 2000Pediatrics, 2004
- Is Managed Care Leading to Consolidation in Health-care Markets?Health Services Research, 2002
- Patient Safety Indicators: using administrative data to identify potential patient safety concerns.2001
- Measures of hospital market structure: a review of the alternatives and a proposed approachSocio-Economic Planning Sciences, 1990