Unknown

Dataset Information

0

Comparison of Costs of Care for Medicare Patients Hospitalized in Teaching and Nonteaching Hospitals.


ABSTRACT:

Importance

Little empirical work has been performed on whether teaching hospitals are more expensive when considering total costs of care for an acute care episode.

Objective

To compare total standardized costs at 30 days by hospital teaching status for common conditions.

Design, setting, and participants

This cross-sectional study assessed the costs of hospitalizations among US Medicare beneficiaries 65 years and older at major, minor, and nonteaching hospitals from January 1, 2014, to November 30, 2015, for 15 medical conditions and 6 surgical procedures. Data analysis was performed from February 26, 2019, to April 16, 2019.

Exposures

Hospital teaching status (major, minor, and nonteaching hospitals).

Main outcomes and measures

The primary outcome was 30-day total standardized costs to Medicare for hospitalizations for all 21 conditions in aggregate as well as stratified by medical and surgical condition categories. Secondary outcomes included 30-day spending for individual components of care (index hospitalization, physician services, readmission, and outpatient and post-acute care services) as well as total standardized costs at 90 days.

Results

The sample consisted of 1?249?006 hospitalizations at 3064 hospitals (232 [7.6%] major teaching, 837 [27.3%] minor teaching, and 1995 [65.1%] nonteaching hospitals). Treatment at a major teaching hospital was associated with lower total 30-day adjusted standardized costs ($18?605 vs $18?793 at minor teaching hospitals and $18?873 at nonteaching hospitals; difference between major and nonteaching hospitals: -$268; 95% CI, -$456 to -$80; P?=?.005). Treatment at a major teaching hospital was associated with higher spending for the index hospitalization ($8529 vs $8370 at minor teaching hospitals and $8180 at nonteaching hospitals; difference between major and nonteaching hospitals: $349; 95% CI, $308-$390; P?Conclusions and relevanceMedicare patients treated at major teaching hospitals had lower Medicare spending at 30 days and similar costs at 90 days compared with Medicare patients at nonteaching hospitals. These findings appear to raise doubts that care at teaching hospitals is necessarily more expensive than care at nonteaching hospitals.

SUBMITTER: Burke LG 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6563581 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

altmetric image

Publications

Comparison of Costs of Care for Medicare Patients Hospitalized in Teaching and Nonteaching Hospitals.

Burke Laura G LG   Khullar Dhruv D   Zheng Jie J   Frakt Austin B AB   Orav E John EJ   Jha Ashish K AK  

JAMA network open 20190605 6


<h4>Importance</h4>Little empirical work has been performed on whether teaching hospitals are more expensive when considering total costs of care for an acute care episode.<h4>Objective</h4>To compare total standardized costs at 30 days by hospital teaching status for common conditions.<h4>Design, setting, and participants</h4>This cross-sectional study assessed the costs of hospitalizations among US Medicare beneficiaries 65 years and older at major, minor, and nonteaching hospitals from Januar  ...[more]

Similar Datasets

| S-EPMC6346221 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC6529222 | biostudies-literature