Hospital LOS confirmed to worsen hip fracture outcomes
Hospital length of stay has been thought to affect a patient’s odds of surviving a hip fracture, and investigators from the University of Rochester Medical Center (URMC) Department of Orthopedics created a new research tool to determine just how much.
The researchers built analytics software to mine New York’s Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System (SPARCS) database. SPARCS contains all payers’ records of virtually every patient case in New York, making it a rich source of information to study and compare patient treatments and outcomes. They published the results of their study recently in The BMJ. (The study is available online at http://tinyurl.com/hpz8hox.)
Questions about fragility fractures and length of hospitalization are of particular interest at URMC because it is home to an internationally renowned Geriatric Fracture Center that improved patient outcomes while reducing patients’ time in the hospital. The center’s research over the past decade has suggested that patients do better with a shorter hospital length of stay. But a January 2015 study of Swedish hip fracture patients published in The BMJ offered a seemingly opposite finding: After reviewing nearly 120,000 patients from 2006-2012, authors concluded that patients with shorter hospitalizations had an increased risk of death. For Swedish hip fracture patients hospitalized less than 10 days, each one-day reduction in length of stay increased their odds of death within 30 days of discharge by 8% in 2006, and the risk rose to 16% in 2012.
Hip fractures are among the most common and disastrous of orthopedic injuries: More than 250,000 older adults suffer a hip fracture in the United States each year and the number is expected to rise as the population ages. It’s a given that the injury can compromise an older patient’s overall health and greatly increases risk of death within one year.
John C. Elfar, MD, associate professor in the Department of Orthopedics, was struck by the study findings. He had been leading orthopedics residents in a journal club dedicated to reviewing and critiquing emerging orthopedics papers; when the Swedish study surfaced, the team launched a study of New York state patients to test its findings. Elfar is the New York study’s senior author.
Using the SPARCS database information, Elfar and his colleagues conducted a retrospective cohort study of 188,208 patients age 50 and older who were admitted to a hospital with a hip fracture in New York from 2000-2011. They found that longer hospital stays spelled worse results for U.S. patients. Compared to patients with a hospital stay of 1-5 days, patients with a hospital length of stay of 11-14 days was associated with a 32% increase in odds of death within 30 days of discharge. The 30-day mortality risk rose to 103% for patients with length of stay of 14 days or more. Researchers concluded that decreased length of stay was associated with lower 30-day mortality rates.
“Patients in New York spend far less time in the hospital than their counterparts in Sweden, but it does not mean that they are being released prematurely here,” Elfar says. “It also does not mean that being in the hospital for a long period of time in New York is a cause of complications or a driver of poorer outcomes.”
The analysis shows that the difference in hospital stays and results between Sweden and the U.S. is related to a difference in healthcare systems, Elfar says.
“Patients do as well here with short hospital stays as they do with longer hospital stays in Sweden because U.S. hospitals focus on acute care and transfer patients to rehabilitation facilities as soon as possible,” he explains. “Such facilities are not available in Sweden, so patients rehab in the hospital setting and spend longer periods of time there.”
Finding the best approach to care is vital because hip fractures are so common and older patients are especially vulnerable, Elfar notes. Women are more likely to die from a hip fracture than breast cancer. In older patients who suffer a hip fracture, perhaps one-third of them will die within a year’s time. In an institutional setting, they are 11 times more likely to die than a patient who has not broken a hip, Elfar explains.
Elfar says Peter Nordström, the corresponding author of the Swedish paper, reviewed URMC’s study and came to the same conclusion, “that the different systems and their outcomes are different for a good reason.” The new study findings validate the soundness of the Geriatric Fracture Center model, Elfar says. “Getting fracture patients out of the hospital quickly is the best approach provided you have a good place to send them for rehabilitative care, as we do here,” he says.
Hospital length of stay has been thought to affect a patient’s odds of surviving a hip fracture, and investigators from the University of Rochester Medical Center Department of Orthopedics created a new research tool to determine just how much.
Subscribe Now for Access
You have reached your article limit for the month. We hope you found our articles both enjoyable and insightful. For information on new subscriptions, product trials, alternative billing arrangements or group and site discounts please call 800-688-2421. We look forward to having you as a long-term member of the Relias Media community.