A Comparative Analysis of Academic and Nonacademic Hospitals on Outcome Measures and Patient Satisfaction

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Abstract

Academic hospitals contribute to health care through patient care, research, and teaching; however, their outcomes may not be equivalent to nonacademic hospitals. Multivariate analysis of variance is used to compare publicly reported data on patient satisfaction, readmission rates, mortality rates, and hospital-acquired injury scores between 1906 academic and nonacademic hospitals, while controlling for hospital-level covariates. Results show that academic hospitals have higher levels of patient satisfaction on 7 of the 11 measures and are equivalent to nonacademic hospitals on the remaining 4 measures. Academic hospitals have lower pneumonia mortality rates than nonacademic hospitals, with no difference for other mortality or disease-specific readmissions. However, academic hospitals have a slightly higher overall readmission rate. Infection rates were equivalent between academic and nonacademic hospitals for central line-associated bloodstream infections, pressure ulcers, and wound dehiscence for abdominal and pelvic injuries, but academic hospitals have higher catheter-associated urinary tract infection rates.

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Chen, A. S., Revere, L., Ratanatawan, A., Beck, C. L., & Allo, J. A. (2019). A Comparative Analysis of Academic and Nonacademic Hospitals on Outcome Measures and Patient Satisfaction. American Journal of Medical Quality, 34(4), 367–375. https://doi.org/10.1177/1062860618800586

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