Emergency department physician-level and hospital-level variation in admission rates

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Abstract

Study objective: We explore the variation in physician- and hospital-level admission rates in a group of emergency physicians in a single health system. Methods: This was a cross-sectional study that used retrospective data during various periods (2005 to 2010) to determine the variation in admission rates among emergency physicians from 3 emergency departments (EDs) within the same health system. Patients who left without being seen or left against medical advice, patients treated in fast-track departments, patients with primary psychiatric complaints, and those younger than 18 years were excluded, as were physicians with fewer than 500 ED encounters during the study period. Emergency physician-level and hospital-level admission rates were estimated with hierarchic logistic regression, which adjusted for patient age, sex, race, chief complaint, arrival mode, and arrival day and time. Results: A total of 389,120 ED visits were included in the analysis, and patients were treated by 89 attending emergency physicians. After adjusting for patient and clinical characteristics, the hospital-level admission rate varied from 27% to 41%. At the physician level, admission rates varied from 21% to 49%. Conclusion: There was 2.3-fold variation in emergency physician adjusted admission rates and 1.7-fold variation at the hospital level. In the new era of cost containment, wide variation in this common, costly decision requires further exploration. © 2013 American College of Emergency Physicians.

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Abualenain, J., Frohna, W. J., Shesser, R., Ding, R., Smith, M., & Pines, J. M. (2013). Emergency department physician-level and hospital-level variation in admission rates. Annals of Emergency Medicine, 61(6), 638–643. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.annemergmed.2013.01.016

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