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Division of General Medicine and Primary Care and the Department of Health Care Quality, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
Email
lhessner@bidmc.harvard.edu
Given name(s)
Lauge
Family name
Sokol‐Hessner
Degrees
MD

It's a matter of respect

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It's a matter of respect

Serious illnesses challenge patients, their families, clinicians, and the health systems that care for them. In this issue of the Journal of Hospital Medicine, Cowen and coauthors shed light on the experience of inpatients on medical and surgical services with a high risk of mortality on admission, as measured by Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems Surveys (HCAHPS).[1] In their study population, even after adjustment for some confounders, these patients tended to rate responsiveness of hospital staff and communication by doctors lower than patients with a low risk of mortality on admission.

A more generalizable frame than admission risk of mortality is to consider the patients they identified as high risk to be patients with serious illness. Using this frame will be helpful in understanding the implications of their results, but it is important to acknowledge that for several reasons, the data in this study may not represent the entire population of seriously ill patients. First, there may be patients at lower risk of mortality who would qualify as having a serious illness. Second, the study's data were from only a few hospitals in 1 healthcare system. Third, 93% of patients at high risk of mortality on admission did not return surveys. Despite these significant limitations, there are still important insights to be gleaned from their work.

Before exploring what they found, it is also important to note that it can be challenging to know what to make of HCAHPS scores. For instance, patients with higher HCAHPS scores have been found to have higher costs of care and higher mortality.[2] Satisfied patients are not clearly better off. However, what if, for purposes of learning, the scores serve as a window into the seriously ill patient's experience, helping inform an understanding of the challenges and opportunities for improvement?

One of the key findings of this study was that seriously ill patients rated responsiveness by hospital staff worse than those who were not as ill. Patients were asked 2 questions as part of the composite measure: During this hospital stay, after you pressed the call button, how often did you get help as soon as you wanted it? How often did you get help in getting to the bathroom or in using a bedpan as soon as you wanted?

It is not difficult to imagine how seriously ill patients might have more intense care needs that would result in more requests for help, nor is it difficult to imagine how some proportion of those requests might not be handled in a timely fashion. Objective research shows higher rates of call button requests have been associated with slower response times, and it appears there is a complex relationship with staffing levels and the intensity of work on the floor.[3] Certainly there may be times that patients want a quick response after pressing a call button, but do not need one, and a lot of time could be spent discussing these quandaries. However, there are also times when a patient describes having called for help, really needing it, yet no one came. At least some of the time, responsiveness is a matter of respect, especially considering the vulnerability of seriously ill patients and the issue of dignity around toileting.

Another key finding was about communication by doctors, and the questions patients answered were: During this hospital stay, how often did doctors treat you with courtesy and respect? During this hospital stay, how often did doctors listen carefully to you? During this hospital stay, how often did doctors explain things in a way you could understand?

There is a growing and important body of literature about communication with seriously ill patients.[4] Consider some of the data about patients with advanced cancer. Evidence suggests the majority of such patients want to know their prognosis, and that when it is discussed it does not worsen the patient‐physician relationship, sadness, or anxiety.[5] Despite this, among physicians who have formulated a prognosis for patients with advanced cancer, even if they were asked directly by those patients about their prognosis, 23% of the time they would communicate no prognosis. Forty percent of the time they would communicate a different prognosis than what they had formulated, with 70% of those being optimistically discrepant.[6] Although data are more limited, there is evidence that hospitalists are similarly wary to acknowledge when patients are at risk of dying.[7]

Although certainly other aspects of communication by doctors with seriously ill patients contributed to this study's findings, this issue of acknowledging and discussing the serious illness itself is important to highlight. Healthcare professionals have an ethical obligation to respect patients' autonomy by helping them make informed decisions about their care. Having these conversations can be challenging, but training programs and conversation guides are showing promise.[8] If health professionals do not try to ensure that seriously ill patients understand their diagnosis, prognosis, and full range of treatment options in patient‐centered ways, then by definition patients cannot be making informed decisions. It is a matter of respect.

This study's most important contribution is how it focuses attention on the domains of responsiveness by hospital staff and communication by doctors, encouraging a deeper dive to consider what else is known about these topics. Allowing that the lower scores from seriously ill patients might reflect more than just poor satisfaction reveals that at least some proportion of the time, these patients are experiencing disrespect. The work then becomes clear: What are the ways in which health professionals should reliably be demonstrating respect toward patients, especially those who are seriously ill? It is there, in the process of developing a reliable practice of respect, that consensus about how to improve the patient experience is most likely to be found.

Disclosure

Nothing to report.

References
  1. Cowen ME, Czerwinski J, Kabara J, Blumenthal DU, Kheder S, Simmons S. The risk‐outcome‐experience triad: mortality risk and the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems Survey. J Hosp Med. 2016;11(9):628635.
  2. Fenton JJ, Jerant AF, Bertakis KD, Franks P. The cost of satisfaction: a national study of patient satisfaction, health care utilization, expenditures, and mortality. Arch Intern Med. 2012;172(5):405411.
  3. Tzeng H‐M, Larson JL. Exploring the relationship between patient call‐light use rate and nurse call‐light response time in acute care settings. Comput Inform Nurs. 2011;29(3):138143.
  4. Bernacki RE, Block SD; American College of Physicians High Value Care Task Force. Communication about serious illness care goals: a review and synthesis of best practices. JAMA Intern Med. 2014;174(12):19942003.
  5. Enzinger AC, Zhang B, Schrag D, Prigerson HG. Outcomes of prognostic disclosure: associations with prognostic understanding, distress, and relationship with physician among patients with advanced cancer. J Clin Oncol. 2015;33(32):38093816.
  6. Lamont EB, Christakis NA. Prognostic disclosure to patients with cancer near the end of life. Ann Intern Med. 2001;134(12):10961105.
  7. Anderson WG, Kools S, Lyndon A. Dancing around death: hospitalist‐patient communication about serious illness. Qual Health Res. 2013;23(1):313.
  8. Bernacki R, Hutchings M, Vick J, et al. Development of the Serious Illness Care Program: a randomised controlled trial of a palliative care communication intervention. BMJ Open. 2015;5(10):e009032.
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Serious illnesses challenge patients, their families, clinicians, and the health systems that care for them. In this issue of the Journal of Hospital Medicine, Cowen and coauthors shed light on the experience of inpatients on medical and surgical services with a high risk of mortality on admission, as measured by Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems Surveys (HCAHPS).[1] In their study population, even after adjustment for some confounders, these patients tended to rate responsiveness of hospital staff and communication by doctors lower than patients with a low risk of mortality on admission.

A more generalizable frame than admission risk of mortality is to consider the patients they identified as high risk to be patients with serious illness. Using this frame will be helpful in understanding the implications of their results, but it is important to acknowledge that for several reasons, the data in this study may not represent the entire population of seriously ill patients. First, there may be patients at lower risk of mortality who would qualify as having a serious illness. Second, the study's data were from only a few hospitals in 1 healthcare system. Third, 93% of patients at high risk of mortality on admission did not return surveys. Despite these significant limitations, there are still important insights to be gleaned from their work.

Before exploring what they found, it is also important to note that it can be challenging to know what to make of HCAHPS scores. For instance, patients with higher HCAHPS scores have been found to have higher costs of care and higher mortality.[2] Satisfied patients are not clearly better off. However, what if, for purposes of learning, the scores serve as a window into the seriously ill patient's experience, helping inform an understanding of the challenges and opportunities for improvement?

One of the key findings of this study was that seriously ill patients rated responsiveness by hospital staff worse than those who were not as ill. Patients were asked 2 questions as part of the composite measure: During this hospital stay, after you pressed the call button, how often did you get help as soon as you wanted it? How often did you get help in getting to the bathroom or in using a bedpan as soon as you wanted?

It is not difficult to imagine how seriously ill patients might have more intense care needs that would result in more requests for help, nor is it difficult to imagine how some proportion of those requests might not be handled in a timely fashion. Objective research shows higher rates of call button requests have been associated with slower response times, and it appears there is a complex relationship with staffing levels and the intensity of work on the floor.[3] Certainly there may be times that patients want a quick response after pressing a call button, but do not need one, and a lot of time could be spent discussing these quandaries. However, there are also times when a patient describes having called for help, really needing it, yet no one came. At least some of the time, responsiveness is a matter of respect, especially considering the vulnerability of seriously ill patients and the issue of dignity around toileting.

Another key finding was about communication by doctors, and the questions patients answered were: During this hospital stay, how often did doctors treat you with courtesy and respect? During this hospital stay, how often did doctors listen carefully to you? During this hospital stay, how often did doctors explain things in a way you could understand?

There is a growing and important body of literature about communication with seriously ill patients.[4] Consider some of the data about patients with advanced cancer. Evidence suggests the majority of such patients want to know their prognosis, and that when it is discussed it does not worsen the patient‐physician relationship, sadness, or anxiety.[5] Despite this, among physicians who have formulated a prognosis for patients with advanced cancer, even if they were asked directly by those patients about their prognosis, 23% of the time they would communicate no prognosis. Forty percent of the time they would communicate a different prognosis than what they had formulated, with 70% of those being optimistically discrepant.[6] Although data are more limited, there is evidence that hospitalists are similarly wary to acknowledge when patients are at risk of dying.[7]

Although certainly other aspects of communication by doctors with seriously ill patients contributed to this study's findings, this issue of acknowledging and discussing the serious illness itself is important to highlight. Healthcare professionals have an ethical obligation to respect patients' autonomy by helping them make informed decisions about their care. Having these conversations can be challenging, but training programs and conversation guides are showing promise.[8] If health professionals do not try to ensure that seriously ill patients understand their diagnosis, prognosis, and full range of treatment options in patient‐centered ways, then by definition patients cannot be making informed decisions. It is a matter of respect.

This study's most important contribution is how it focuses attention on the domains of responsiveness by hospital staff and communication by doctors, encouraging a deeper dive to consider what else is known about these topics. Allowing that the lower scores from seriously ill patients might reflect more than just poor satisfaction reveals that at least some proportion of the time, these patients are experiencing disrespect. The work then becomes clear: What are the ways in which health professionals should reliably be demonstrating respect toward patients, especially those who are seriously ill? It is there, in the process of developing a reliable practice of respect, that consensus about how to improve the patient experience is most likely to be found.

Disclosure

Nothing to report.

Serious illnesses challenge patients, their families, clinicians, and the health systems that care for them. In this issue of the Journal of Hospital Medicine, Cowen and coauthors shed light on the experience of inpatients on medical and surgical services with a high risk of mortality on admission, as measured by Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems Surveys (HCAHPS).[1] In their study population, even after adjustment for some confounders, these patients tended to rate responsiveness of hospital staff and communication by doctors lower than patients with a low risk of mortality on admission.

A more generalizable frame than admission risk of mortality is to consider the patients they identified as high risk to be patients with serious illness. Using this frame will be helpful in understanding the implications of their results, but it is important to acknowledge that for several reasons, the data in this study may not represent the entire population of seriously ill patients. First, there may be patients at lower risk of mortality who would qualify as having a serious illness. Second, the study's data were from only a few hospitals in 1 healthcare system. Third, 93% of patients at high risk of mortality on admission did not return surveys. Despite these significant limitations, there are still important insights to be gleaned from their work.

Before exploring what they found, it is also important to note that it can be challenging to know what to make of HCAHPS scores. For instance, patients with higher HCAHPS scores have been found to have higher costs of care and higher mortality.[2] Satisfied patients are not clearly better off. However, what if, for purposes of learning, the scores serve as a window into the seriously ill patient's experience, helping inform an understanding of the challenges and opportunities for improvement?

One of the key findings of this study was that seriously ill patients rated responsiveness by hospital staff worse than those who were not as ill. Patients were asked 2 questions as part of the composite measure: During this hospital stay, after you pressed the call button, how often did you get help as soon as you wanted it? How often did you get help in getting to the bathroom or in using a bedpan as soon as you wanted?

It is not difficult to imagine how seriously ill patients might have more intense care needs that would result in more requests for help, nor is it difficult to imagine how some proportion of those requests might not be handled in a timely fashion. Objective research shows higher rates of call button requests have been associated with slower response times, and it appears there is a complex relationship with staffing levels and the intensity of work on the floor.[3] Certainly there may be times that patients want a quick response after pressing a call button, but do not need one, and a lot of time could be spent discussing these quandaries. However, there are also times when a patient describes having called for help, really needing it, yet no one came. At least some of the time, responsiveness is a matter of respect, especially considering the vulnerability of seriously ill patients and the issue of dignity around toileting.

Another key finding was about communication by doctors, and the questions patients answered were: During this hospital stay, how often did doctors treat you with courtesy and respect? During this hospital stay, how often did doctors listen carefully to you? During this hospital stay, how often did doctors explain things in a way you could understand?

There is a growing and important body of literature about communication with seriously ill patients.[4] Consider some of the data about patients with advanced cancer. Evidence suggests the majority of such patients want to know their prognosis, and that when it is discussed it does not worsen the patient‐physician relationship, sadness, or anxiety.[5] Despite this, among physicians who have formulated a prognosis for patients with advanced cancer, even if they were asked directly by those patients about their prognosis, 23% of the time they would communicate no prognosis. Forty percent of the time they would communicate a different prognosis than what they had formulated, with 70% of those being optimistically discrepant.[6] Although data are more limited, there is evidence that hospitalists are similarly wary to acknowledge when patients are at risk of dying.[7]

Although certainly other aspects of communication by doctors with seriously ill patients contributed to this study's findings, this issue of acknowledging and discussing the serious illness itself is important to highlight. Healthcare professionals have an ethical obligation to respect patients' autonomy by helping them make informed decisions about their care. Having these conversations can be challenging, but training programs and conversation guides are showing promise.[8] If health professionals do not try to ensure that seriously ill patients understand their diagnosis, prognosis, and full range of treatment options in patient‐centered ways, then by definition patients cannot be making informed decisions. It is a matter of respect.

This study's most important contribution is how it focuses attention on the domains of responsiveness by hospital staff and communication by doctors, encouraging a deeper dive to consider what else is known about these topics. Allowing that the lower scores from seriously ill patients might reflect more than just poor satisfaction reveals that at least some proportion of the time, these patients are experiencing disrespect. The work then becomes clear: What are the ways in which health professionals should reliably be demonstrating respect toward patients, especially those who are seriously ill? It is there, in the process of developing a reliable practice of respect, that consensus about how to improve the patient experience is most likely to be found.

Disclosure

Nothing to report.

References
  1. Cowen ME, Czerwinski J, Kabara J, Blumenthal DU, Kheder S, Simmons S. The risk‐outcome‐experience triad: mortality risk and the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems Survey. J Hosp Med. 2016;11(9):628635.
  2. Fenton JJ, Jerant AF, Bertakis KD, Franks P. The cost of satisfaction: a national study of patient satisfaction, health care utilization, expenditures, and mortality. Arch Intern Med. 2012;172(5):405411.
  3. Tzeng H‐M, Larson JL. Exploring the relationship between patient call‐light use rate and nurse call‐light response time in acute care settings. Comput Inform Nurs. 2011;29(3):138143.
  4. Bernacki RE, Block SD; American College of Physicians High Value Care Task Force. Communication about serious illness care goals: a review and synthesis of best practices. JAMA Intern Med. 2014;174(12):19942003.
  5. Enzinger AC, Zhang B, Schrag D, Prigerson HG. Outcomes of prognostic disclosure: associations with prognostic understanding, distress, and relationship with physician among patients with advanced cancer. J Clin Oncol. 2015;33(32):38093816.
  6. Lamont EB, Christakis NA. Prognostic disclosure to patients with cancer near the end of life. Ann Intern Med. 2001;134(12):10961105.
  7. Anderson WG, Kools S, Lyndon A. Dancing around death: hospitalist‐patient communication about serious illness. Qual Health Res. 2013;23(1):313.
  8. Bernacki R, Hutchings M, Vick J, et al. Development of the Serious Illness Care Program: a randomised controlled trial of a palliative care communication intervention. BMJ Open. 2015;5(10):e009032.
References
  1. Cowen ME, Czerwinski J, Kabara J, Blumenthal DU, Kheder S, Simmons S. The risk‐outcome‐experience triad: mortality risk and the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems Survey. J Hosp Med. 2016;11(9):628635.
  2. Fenton JJ, Jerant AF, Bertakis KD, Franks P. The cost of satisfaction: a national study of patient satisfaction, health care utilization, expenditures, and mortality. Arch Intern Med. 2012;172(5):405411.
  3. Tzeng H‐M, Larson JL. Exploring the relationship between patient call‐light use rate and nurse call‐light response time in acute care settings. Comput Inform Nurs. 2011;29(3):138143.
  4. Bernacki RE, Block SD; American College of Physicians High Value Care Task Force. Communication about serious illness care goals: a review and synthesis of best practices. JAMA Intern Med. 2014;174(12):19942003.
  5. Enzinger AC, Zhang B, Schrag D, Prigerson HG. Outcomes of prognostic disclosure: associations with prognostic understanding, distress, and relationship with physician among patients with advanced cancer. J Clin Oncol. 2015;33(32):38093816.
  6. Lamont EB, Christakis NA. Prognostic disclosure to patients with cancer near the end of life. Ann Intern Med. 2001;134(12):10961105.
  7. Anderson WG, Kools S, Lyndon A. Dancing around death: hospitalist‐patient communication about serious illness. Qual Health Res. 2013;23(1):313.
  8. Bernacki R, Hutchings M, Vick J, et al. Development of the Serious Illness Care Program: a randomised controlled trial of a palliative care communication intervention. BMJ Open. 2015;5(10):e009032.
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Interhospital Transfer Patients

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Interhospital transfer patients discharged by academic hospitalists and general internists: Characteristics and outcomes

Interhospital transfers (IHTs) to academic medical centers (AMCs) or their affiliated hospitals may benefit patients who require unique specialty and procedural services. However, IHTs also introduce a potentially risky transition of care for patients suffering from complex or unstable medical problems.[1] Components of this risk include the dangers associated with transportation and the disrupted continuity of care that may lead to delays or errors in care.[2, 3] Furthermore, referring and accepting providers may face barriers to optimal handoffs including a lack of shared communication standards and difficulty accessing external medical records.[3, 4, 5] Although some authors have recommended the creation of formal guidelines for interhospital transfer processes for all patients to mitigate the risks of transfer, the available guidelines governing the IHT triage and communication process are limited to critically ill patients.[6]

A recent study of a diverse patient and hospital dataset demonstrated that interhospital transfer patients have a higher risk of mortality, increased length of stay (LOS), and increased risk of adverse events as compared with non‐transfer patients.[7] However, it is unknown if these findings persist in the population of patients transferred specifically to AMCs or their affiliated hospitals (the combination is hereafter referred to as academic health systems [AHSs]). AMCs provide a disproportionate share of IHT care for complex patients and have a vested interest in improving the outcomes of these transitions.[8] Prior single‐center studies of acute care adult medical patients accepted to AMCs have shown that IHT is associated with a longer LOS, increased in‐hospital mortality, and higher resource use.[9, 10] However, it is difficult to generalize from single‐center studies due to the variation in referral practices, geography, and network characteristics. Additionally, AMC referral systems, patient mix, and utilization of hospitalists have likely changed substantially in the nearly 2 decades since those reports were published.

Hospitalists and general internists often manage the transfer acceptance processes for internal medicine services at receiving hospitals, helping to triage and coordinate care for IHT patients. As a result, it is important for hospitalists to understand the characteristics and outcomes of the IHT population. In addition to informing the decision making around transfer for a given patient, such an understanding is the foundation for helping providers and institutions begin to systematically identify and mitigate peritransfer risks.

We conducted this large multicenter study to describe the characteristics and outcomes of a current, nationally representative IHT patient population discharged by hospitalists and general internists at AHSs. To identify unique features of the IHT population, we compared patients transferred from another hospital to an AHS to those admitted to the AHS directly from the AHS's emergency department (ED). Based on our anecdotal experiences and the prior single‐center study findings in adult medical populations,[9, 10] we hypothesized that the IHT population would be sicker, stay in the hospital and intensive care unit (ICU) longer, and have higher costs and in‐hospital mortality than ED patients. Although there may be fundamental differences between the 2 groups related to disease and patient condition, we hypothesized that outcome differences would persist even after adjusting for patient factors such as demographics, disease‐specific risk of mortality, and ICU utilization.

PATIENTS AND METHODS

We conducted a retrospective cohort study using data from the University HealthSystem Consortium (UHC) Clinical Database and Resource Manager (CDB/RM). UHC is an alliance of 120 academic medical centers and 300 of their affiliated hospitals for the purposes of collaboration on performance improvement. Each year, a subset of participating hospitals submits data on all of their inpatient discharges to the CDB/RM, which totals approximately 5 million records. The CDB/RM includes information from billing forms including demographics, diagnoses, and procedures as captured by International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD‐9) codes, discharge disposition, and line item charge detail for the type of bed (eg, floor, ICU). Most hospitals also provide detailed charge information including pharmacy, imaging, blood products, lab tests, and supplies. Some hospitals do not provide any charge data. The Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and University of Washington institutional review boards reviewed and approved the conduct of this study.

We included all inpatients discharged by hospitalists or general internal medicine physicians from UHC hospitals between April 1, 2011 and March 31, 2012. We excluded minors, pregnant patients, and prisoners. One hundred fifty‐eight adult academic medical centers and affiliated hospitals submitted data throughout this time period. Our primary independent variable, IHT status, was defined by patients whose admission source was another acute care institution. ED admissions were defined as patients admitted from the AHS ED whose source of origination was not another hospital or ambulatory surgery site.

Admission Characteristics

Admission characteristics of interest included age, gender, insurance status, the most common diagnoses in each cohort based on Medicare Severity Diagnosis‐Related Group (MS‐DRG), the most common Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) comorbitidies,[11] the most common procedures, and the admission 3M All‐Patient Refined Diagnosis‐Related Group (APR‐DRG) risk of mortality (ROM) scores. 3M APR‐DRG ROM scores are proprietary categorical measures specific to the base APR‐DRG to which a patient is assigned, which are calculated using data available at the time of admission, including comorbid condition diagnosis codes, age, procedure codes, and principal diagnosis codes. A patient can fall into 1 of 4 categories with this score: minor, moderate, major, or extreme.[12]

Outcomes

Our primary outcome of interest was in‐hospital mortality. Secondary outcomes included LOS, the cost of care, ICU utilization, and discharge destination. The cost of care is a standardized estimate of the direct costs based on an adjustment of the charges submitted by CDB/RM participants. If an IHT is triaged through a receiving hospital's ED, the cost of care reflects those charges as well as the inpatient charges.

Statistical Analysis

We used descriptive statistics to characterize the IHT and ED patient populations. For bivariate comparisons of continuous variables, 2‐sample t tests with unequal variance were used. For categorical variables, 2 analysis was performed. We assessed the impact of IHT status on in‐hospital mortality using logistic regression to estimate unadjusted and adjusted relative risks, 95% confidence intervals (CIs), and P values. We included age, gender, insurance status, race, timing of ICU utilization, and 3M APR‐DRG ROM scores as independent variables. Prior studies have used this type of risk‐adjustment methodology with 3M APR‐DRG ROM scores,[13, 14, 15] including with interhospital transfer patients.[16] For all comparisons, a P value of <0.05 was considered statistically significant. Our sample size was determined by the data available for the 1‐year period.

Subgroup Analyses

We performed a stratified analysis based on the timing of ICU transfer to allow for additional comparisons of mortality within more homogeneous patient groups, and to control for the possibility that delays in ICU transfer could explain the association between IHT and in‐hospital mortality. We determined whether and when a patient spent time in the ICU based on daily accommodation charges. If a patient was charged for an ICU bed on the day of admission, we coded them as a direct ICU admission, and if the first ICU bed charge was on a subsequent day, they were coded as a delayed ICU admission. Approximately 20% of patients did not have the data necessary to determine the timing of ICU utilization, because the hospitals where they received care did not submit detailed charge data to the UHC.

Data analysis was performed by the UHC. Analysis was performed using Stata version 10 (StataCorp, College Station, TX). For all comparisons, a P value of <0.05 was considered significant.

RESULTS

Patient Characteristics

We identified 885,392 patients who met study criteria: 75,524 patients admitted as an IHT and 809,868 patients admitted from the ED. The proportion of each hospital's admissions that were IHTs that met our study criteria varied widely (median 9%, 25th percentile 3%, 75th percentile 14%). The average age and gender of the IHT and ED populations were similar and reflective of a nationally representative adult inpatient sample (Table 1). Racial compositions of the populations were notable for a higher portion of black patients in the ED admission group than the IHT group (25.4% vs 13.2%, P < 0.001). A slightly higher portion of the IHT population was covered by commercial insurance compared with the ED admissions (22.7% vs 19.1%, P < 0.001).

Characteristics of 885,392 Patients Discharged by Academic General Internists or Hospitalists by Source of Admission*
Demographic/Clinical VariablesEDIHT 
1st2nd 3rd4thRank
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: AHRQ, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; APR‐DRG admission ROM score, All‐Patient Refined Diagnosis‐Related Group Admission Risk of Mortality score; CC, complication or comorbidity (except under the AHRQ comorbidities where it refers to chronic complications); ED, emergency department (patients admitted from the academic health system's emergency department whose source of origination was not another hospital or ambulatory surgery site); GI, gastrointestinal; IHT, interhospital transfer (patients whose admission source was another acute care institution); MCC, major complication or comorbidity; MS‐DRG, Medicare Severity Diagnosis‐Related Group; MV, mechanical ventilation; SD, standard deviation. *All differences were significant at a level of P < 0.001. Denominator is the total number of patients. All other denominators are the total number of patients in that column. Subgroups may not sum to the total denominator due to incomplete data.

No. of patients809,86891.5 75,5248.5 
Age, y62.2 19.1  60.2 18.2  
Male381,56347.1 38,85051.4 
Female428,30352.9 36,67248.6 
Race      
White492,89460.9 54,78072.5 
Black205,30925.4 9,96813.2 
Other66,7098.1 7,77710.3 
Hispanic44,9565.6 2,9994.0 
Primary payer      
Commercial154,82619.1 17,13022.7 
Medicaid193,58523.9 15,92421.1 
Medicare445,22755.0 39,30152.0 
Other16,2302.0 3,1694.2 
Most common MS‐DRGs (top 5 for each group)      
Esophagitis, gastroenteritis, and miscellaneous digest disorders without MCC34,1164.21st1,5172.12nd
Septicemia or severe sepsis without MV 96+ hours with MCC25,7103.22nd2,6253.71st
Cellulitis without MCC21,6862.73rd8711.28th
Kidney and urinary tract infections without MCC19,9372.54th6310.921st
Chest pain18,0562.25th4950.734th
Renal failure with CC15,4781.99th1,0181.45th
GI hemorrhage with CC12,8551.612th1,2341.73rd
Respiratory system diagnosis w ventilator support4,7730.647th1,1181.64th
AHRQ comorbidities (top 5 for each group)      
Hypertension468,02617.81st39,34016.41st
Fluid and electrolyte disorders251,3399.52nd19,8258.32nd
Deficiency anemia208,7227.93rd19,6638.23rd
Diabetes without CCs190,1407.24th17,1317.14th
Chronic pulmonary disease178,1646.85th16,3196.85th
Most common procedures (top 5 for each group)      
Packed cell transfusion72,5907.01st9,7565.02nd
(Central) venous catheter insertion68,6876.72nd13,7557.01st
Hemodialysis41,5574.03rd5,3512.74th
Heart ultrasound (echocardiogram)37,7623.74th5,4412.83rd
Insert endotracheal tube25,3602.55th4,7052.46th
Continuous invasive mechanical ventilation19,2211.99th5,2802.75th
3M APR‐DRG admission ROM score      
Minor271,70233.6 18,62026.1 
Moderate286,42735.4 21,77530.5 
Major193,65223.9 20,53128.7 
Extreme58,0817.2 10,52714.7 

Primary discharge diagnoses (MS‐DRGs) varied widely, with no single diagnosis accounting for more than 4.2% of admissions in either group. The most common primary diagnoses among IHTs included severe sepsis (3.7%), esophagitis and gastroenteritis (2.1%), and gastrointestinal bleeding (1.7%). The top 5 most common AHRQ comorbidities were the same between the IHT and ED populations. A higher proportion of IHTs had at least 1 procedure performed during their hospitalization (68.5% vs 49.8%, P < 0.001). Note that ICD‐9 procedure codes include interventions such as blood transfusions and dialysis (Table 1), which may not be considered procedures in common medical parlance.

As compared with those admitted from the ED, IHTs had a higher proportion of patients categorized with major or extreme admission risk of mortality score (major + extreme, ED 31.1% vs IHT 43.5%, P < 0.001).

Overall Outcomes

IHT patients experienced a 60% longer average LOS, and a higher proportion spent time in the ICU than patients admitted through the ED (Table 2). On average, care for IHT patients cost more per day than for ED patients (Table 2). A lower proportion of IHTs were discharged home (68.6% vs 77.4% of ED patients), and a higher proportion died in the hospital (4.1% vs 1.8%) (P < 0.001 for both). Of the ED or IHT patients who died during their admission, there was no significant difference between the proportion who died within 48 hours of admission (26.4% vs 25.6%, P = 0.3693). After adjusting for age, gender, insurance status, race, ICU utilization and 3M APR‐DRG admission ROM scores, IHT was independently associated with the risk of in‐hospital death (odds ratio [OR]: 1.36, 95% CI: 1.291.43) (Table 3). The C statistic for the in‐hospital mortality model was 0.88.

Outcomes of 885,392 Academic Health System Patients Based on Source of Admission*
 ED, n = 809,868IHT, n = 75,524
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: ED, emergency department (patients admitted from the academic health system's emergency department whose source of origination was not another hospital or ambulatory surgery site); ICU, intensive care unit; IHT, interhospital transfer (patients whose admission source was another acute care institution); LOS, length of stay; SD, standard deviation. *All differences were significant at a level of P < 0.001 except the portion of deaths in 48 hours. ICU days data were available for 798,132 patients admitted from the ED and 71,054 IHT patients. Cost data were available for 792,604 patients admitted from the ED and 71,033 IHT patients.

LOS, mean SD5.0 6.98.0 13.4
ICU days, mean SD0.6 2.41.7 5.2
Patients who spent some time in the ICU14.3%29.8%
% LOS in the ICU (ICU days LOS)11.0%21.6%
Average total cost SD$10,731 $16,593$19,818 $34,665
Average cost per day (total cost LOS)$2,139$2,492
Discharged home77.4%68.6%
Died as inpatient14,869 (1.8%)3,051 (4.0%)
Died within 48 hours of admission (% total deaths)3,918 (26.4%)780 (25.6%)
Multivariable Model of In‐hospital Mortality (n = 707,248)
VariableUnadjusted OR (95% CI)Adjusted OR (95% CI)
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: APR‐DRG admission ROM score, All‐Patient Refined Diagnosis‐Related Group Admission Risk of Mortality score; CI, confidence interval; ICU, intensive care unit; IHT, interhospital transfer (patients whose admission source was another acute care institution); OR, odds ratio.

Age, y1.00 (1.001.00)1.03 (1.031.03)
Gender  
FemaleRef.Ref.
Male1.13 (1.091.70)1.05 (1.011.09)
Medicare status  
NoRef.Ref.
Yes2.14 (2.062.22)1.39 (1.331.47)
Race  
NonblackRef.Ref.
Black0.57 (0.550.60)0.77 (0.730.81)
ICU utilization  
No ICU admissionRef.Ref.
Direct admission to the ICU5.56 (5.295.84)2.25 (2.132.38)
Delayed ICU admission5.48 (5.275.69)2.46 (2.362.57)
3M APR‐DRG admission ROM score  
MinorRef.Ref.
Moderate8.71 (7.5510.05)6.28 (5.437.25)
Major43.97 (38.3150.47)25.84 (22.4729.71)
Extreme238.65 (207.69273.80)107.17 (93.07123.40)
IHT  
NoRef.Ref.
Yes2.36 (2.262.48)1.36 (1.29 1.43)

Subgroup Analyses

Table 4 demonstrates the unadjusted and adjusted results from our analysis stratified by timing of ICU utilization. IHT remained independently associated with in‐hospital mortality regardless of timing of ICU utilization.

Unadjusted and Adjusted Associations Between IHT and In‐hospital Mortality, Stratified by ICU Timing*
SubgroupIn‐hospital Mortality, n (%)Unadjusted OR [95% CI]Adjusted OR [95% CI]
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; ED, emergency department (patients admitted from the academic health system's emergency department whose source of origination was not another hospital or ambulatory surgery site); ICU, intensive care unit; IHT, interhospital transfer (patients whose admission source was another acute care institution); OR, odds ratio. *Timing of ICU utilization data were available for 650,608 of the patients admitted from the ED (80% of all ED admissions) and 56,640 of the IHT patients (75% of all IHTs).

No ICU admission, n = 552,171   
ED, n = 519,4214,913 (0.95%)Ref.Ref.
IHT, n = 32,750590 (1.80%)1.92 [1.762.09]1.68 [1.531.84]
Direct admission to the ICU, n = 44,537   
ED, n = 35,6141,733 (4.87%)Ref.Ref.
IHT, n = 8,923628 (7.04%)1.48 [1.351.63]1.24 [1.121.37]
Delayed ICU admission, n = 110,540   
ED, n = 95,5734,706 (4.92%)Ref.Ref.
IHT, n = 14,9671,068 (7.14%)1.48 [1.391.59]1.25 [1.171.35]

DISCUSSION

Our study of IHT patients ultimately discharged by hospitalists and general internists at US academic referral centers found significantly increased average LOS, costs, and in‐hospital mortality compared with patients admitted from the ED. The increased risk of mortality persisted after adjustment for patient characteristics and variables representing endogenous risk of mortality, and in more homogeneous subgroups after stratification by presence and timing of ICU utilization. These data confirm findings from single‐center studies and suggest that observations about the difference between IHT and ED populations may be generalizable across US academic hospitals.

Our work builds on 2 single‐center studies that examined mixed medical and surgical academic IHT populations from the late 1980s and early 1990s,[9, 10] and 1 studying surgical ICU patients in 2013.[17] These studies demonstrated longer average LOS, higher costs, and higher mortality rates (in both adjusted and unadjusted analyses). Our work confirmed these findings utilizing a more current, multicenter large dataset of IHT patients ultimately discharged by hospitalists and general internists. Our work is unique from a larger, more recent study[7] in that it focuses on patients transferred to academic health systems, and therefore has particular relevance to those settings. In addition, we divided patients into subpopulations based on the timing of ICU utilization, and found that in each of these populations, IHT remained independently associated with in‐hospital mortality.

Our analysis does not explain why the outcomes of IHTs are worse, but plausible contributing factors include that (1) patients chosen for IHT are at higher risk of death in ways uncaptured by established mortality risk scores, (2) referring, transferring, or accepting providers and institutions have provided inadequate care, (3) the transfer process itself involves harm, (4) socioeconomic bias in selection for IHT,[18] or (5) some combination of the above. Regardless of the causes of the worse outcomes observed in these outside‐hospital transfers, as these patients are colloquially known at accepting hospitals, they present challenges to everyone involved. Referring providers may feel a sense of urgency as these patients' needs exceed their management capabilities. The process is often time consuming and burdensome for referring and accepting providers because of poorly developed systems.[19] The transfer often takes patients further from their home and may make it more difficult for family to participate in their care. The transfer may delay care if the accepting institution cannot immediately accept the patient or if the time in transport is prolonged, which could result in decompensation at a critical juncture. For providers inheriting such patients, the stress of caring for these patients is compounded by the difficulty obtaining records about the prior hospitalization.[20] This frustrating experience is often translated into unfounded judgment of the institution that referred the patient and the care provided there.[21] It is important for hospitalists making decisions throughout the transfer process and for hospital leaders who determine staffing levels, measure the quality of care, manage hospital networks, or write hospital policy to appreciate that the transfer process itself may contribute to the challenges and poor outcomes we observe. Furthermore, regardless of the cause for the increased mortality that we observed, our findings imply that IHT patients require careful evaluation, management, and treatment.

Many accepting institutions have transfer centers that facilitate these transitions, utilizing protocols and templates to standardize the process.[22, 23] Future research should focus on the characteristics of these centers to learn which practices are most efficacious. Interventions to mitigate the known challenges of transfer (including patient selection and triage, handoff communication, and information sharing) could be tested by randomized studies at referring and accepting institutions. There may be a role for health information exchange or the development of enhanced pretransfer evaluation processes using telemedicine models; there is evidence that information sharing may reduce redundant imaging.[24] Perhaps targeted review of IHTs admitted to a non‐ICU portion of the hospital and subsequently transferred to the ICU could identify opportunities to improve triaging protocols and thus avert some of the bad outcomes observed in this subpopulation. A related future direction could be to create protected forumsusing the patient safety organization framework[25]to facilitate the discussion of interhospital transfer outcomes among the referring, transporting, and receiving parties. Lastly, future work should investigate the reasons for the different proportions of black patients in the ED versus IHT cohorts. Our finding that black race was associated with lower risk of mortality has been previously reported but may also benefit from more investigation.[26]

There are several limitations of our work. First, despite extensive adjustment for patient characteristics, due to the observational nature of our study it is still possible that IHTs differ from ED admissions in ways that were unaccounted for in our analysis, and which could be associated with increased mortality independent of the transfer process itself. We are unable to characterize features of the transfer process, such as the reason for transfer, differences in transfer processes among hospitals, or the distance and mode of travel, which may influence outcomes.[27] Because we used administrative data, variations in coding could incorrectly estimate the complexity or severity of illness on admission, which is a previously described risk.[28] In addition, although our dataset was very large, it was limited by incomplete charge data, which limited our ability to measure ICU utilization in our full cohort. The hospitals missing ICU charge data are of variable sizes and are distributed around the country, limiting the chance of systematic bias. Finally, in some settings, hospitalists may serve as the discharging physician for patients admitted to other services such as the ICU, introducing heterogeneity and bias to the sample. We attempted to mitigate such bias through our subgroup analysis, which allowed for comparisons within more homogeneous patient groupings.

In conclusion, our large multicenter study of academic health systems confirms the findings of prior single‐center academic studies and a large general population study that interhospital transfer patients have an increased average LOS, costs, and adjusted in‐hospital mortality than patients admitted from the ED. This difference in mortality persisted even after controlling for several other predictors of mortality. Our findings emphasize the need for future studies designed to clarify the reason for the increased risk and identify targets for interventions to improve outcomes for the interhospital transfer population.

Acknowledgements

The authors gratefully acknowledge Zachary Goldberger and Tom Gallagher for their critical reviews of this article.

Disclosures

Dr. Herzig was funded by grant number K23AG042459 from the National Institute on Aging. The funding organization had no involvement in any aspect of the study, including design and conduct of the study; collection, management, analysis, and interpretation of the data; and preparation, review, or approval of the manuscript. The authors report no conflicts of interest.

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References
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Interhospital transfers (IHTs) to academic medical centers (AMCs) or their affiliated hospitals may benefit patients who require unique specialty and procedural services. However, IHTs also introduce a potentially risky transition of care for patients suffering from complex or unstable medical problems.[1] Components of this risk include the dangers associated with transportation and the disrupted continuity of care that may lead to delays or errors in care.[2, 3] Furthermore, referring and accepting providers may face barriers to optimal handoffs including a lack of shared communication standards and difficulty accessing external medical records.[3, 4, 5] Although some authors have recommended the creation of formal guidelines for interhospital transfer processes for all patients to mitigate the risks of transfer, the available guidelines governing the IHT triage and communication process are limited to critically ill patients.[6]

A recent study of a diverse patient and hospital dataset demonstrated that interhospital transfer patients have a higher risk of mortality, increased length of stay (LOS), and increased risk of adverse events as compared with non‐transfer patients.[7] However, it is unknown if these findings persist in the population of patients transferred specifically to AMCs or their affiliated hospitals (the combination is hereafter referred to as academic health systems [AHSs]). AMCs provide a disproportionate share of IHT care for complex patients and have a vested interest in improving the outcomes of these transitions.[8] Prior single‐center studies of acute care adult medical patients accepted to AMCs have shown that IHT is associated with a longer LOS, increased in‐hospital mortality, and higher resource use.[9, 10] However, it is difficult to generalize from single‐center studies due to the variation in referral practices, geography, and network characteristics. Additionally, AMC referral systems, patient mix, and utilization of hospitalists have likely changed substantially in the nearly 2 decades since those reports were published.

Hospitalists and general internists often manage the transfer acceptance processes for internal medicine services at receiving hospitals, helping to triage and coordinate care for IHT patients. As a result, it is important for hospitalists to understand the characteristics and outcomes of the IHT population. In addition to informing the decision making around transfer for a given patient, such an understanding is the foundation for helping providers and institutions begin to systematically identify and mitigate peritransfer risks.

We conducted this large multicenter study to describe the characteristics and outcomes of a current, nationally representative IHT patient population discharged by hospitalists and general internists at AHSs. To identify unique features of the IHT population, we compared patients transferred from another hospital to an AHS to those admitted to the AHS directly from the AHS's emergency department (ED). Based on our anecdotal experiences and the prior single‐center study findings in adult medical populations,[9, 10] we hypothesized that the IHT population would be sicker, stay in the hospital and intensive care unit (ICU) longer, and have higher costs and in‐hospital mortality than ED patients. Although there may be fundamental differences between the 2 groups related to disease and patient condition, we hypothesized that outcome differences would persist even after adjusting for patient factors such as demographics, disease‐specific risk of mortality, and ICU utilization.

PATIENTS AND METHODS

We conducted a retrospective cohort study using data from the University HealthSystem Consortium (UHC) Clinical Database and Resource Manager (CDB/RM). UHC is an alliance of 120 academic medical centers and 300 of their affiliated hospitals for the purposes of collaboration on performance improvement. Each year, a subset of participating hospitals submits data on all of their inpatient discharges to the CDB/RM, which totals approximately 5 million records. The CDB/RM includes information from billing forms including demographics, diagnoses, and procedures as captured by International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD‐9) codes, discharge disposition, and line item charge detail for the type of bed (eg, floor, ICU). Most hospitals also provide detailed charge information including pharmacy, imaging, blood products, lab tests, and supplies. Some hospitals do not provide any charge data. The Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and University of Washington institutional review boards reviewed and approved the conduct of this study.

We included all inpatients discharged by hospitalists or general internal medicine physicians from UHC hospitals between April 1, 2011 and March 31, 2012. We excluded minors, pregnant patients, and prisoners. One hundred fifty‐eight adult academic medical centers and affiliated hospitals submitted data throughout this time period. Our primary independent variable, IHT status, was defined by patients whose admission source was another acute care institution. ED admissions were defined as patients admitted from the AHS ED whose source of origination was not another hospital or ambulatory surgery site.

Admission Characteristics

Admission characteristics of interest included age, gender, insurance status, the most common diagnoses in each cohort based on Medicare Severity Diagnosis‐Related Group (MS‐DRG), the most common Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) comorbitidies,[11] the most common procedures, and the admission 3M All‐Patient Refined Diagnosis‐Related Group (APR‐DRG) risk of mortality (ROM) scores. 3M APR‐DRG ROM scores are proprietary categorical measures specific to the base APR‐DRG to which a patient is assigned, which are calculated using data available at the time of admission, including comorbid condition diagnosis codes, age, procedure codes, and principal diagnosis codes. A patient can fall into 1 of 4 categories with this score: minor, moderate, major, or extreme.[12]

Outcomes

Our primary outcome of interest was in‐hospital mortality. Secondary outcomes included LOS, the cost of care, ICU utilization, and discharge destination. The cost of care is a standardized estimate of the direct costs based on an adjustment of the charges submitted by CDB/RM participants. If an IHT is triaged through a receiving hospital's ED, the cost of care reflects those charges as well as the inpatient charges.

Statistical Analysis

We used descriptive statistics to characterize the IHT and ED patient populations. For bivariate comparisons of continuous variables, 2‐sample t tests with unequal variance were used. For categorical variables, 2 analysis was performed. We assessed the impact of IHT status on in‐hospital mortality using logistic regression to estimate unadjusted and adjusted relative risks, 95% confidence intervals (CIs), and P values. We included age, gender, insurance status, race, timing of ICU utilization, and 3M APR‐DRG ROM scores as independent variables. Prior studies have used this type of risk‐adjustment methodology with 3M APR‐DRG ROM scores,[13, 14, 15] including with interhospital transfer patients.[16] For all comparisons, a P value of <0.05 was considered statistically significant. Our sample size was determined by the data available for the 1‐year period.

Subgroup Analyses

We performed a stratified analysis based on the timing of ICU transfer to allow for additional comparisons of mortality within more homogeneous patient groups, and to control for the possibility that delays in ICU transfer could explain the association between IHT and in‐hospital mortality. We determined whether and when a patient spent time in the ICU based on daily accommodation charges. If a patient was charged for an ICU bed on the day of admission, we coded them as a direct ICU admission, and if the first ICU bed charge was on a subsequent day, they were coded as a delayed ICU admission. Approximately 20% of patients did not have the data necessary to determine the timing of ICU utilization, because the hospitals where they received care did not submit detailed charge data to the UHC.

Data analysis was performed by the UHC. Analysis was performed using Stata version 10 (StataCorp, College Station, TX). For all comparisons, a P value of <0.05 was considered significant.

RESULTS

Patient Characteristics

We identified 885,392 patients who met study criteria: 75,524 patients admitted as an IHT and 809,868 patients admitted from the ED. The proportion of each hospital's admissions that were IHTs that met our study criteria varied widely (median 9%, 25th percentile 3%, 75th percentile 14%). The average age and gender of the IHT and ED populations were similar and reflective of a nationally representative adult inpatient sample (Table 1). Racial compositions of the populations were notable for a higher portion of black patients in the ED admission group than the IHT group (25.4% vs 13.2%, P < 0.001). A slightly higher portion of the IHT population was covered by commercial insurance compared with the ED admissions (22.7% vs 19.1%, P < 0.001).

Characteristics of 885,392 Patients Discharged by Academic General Internists or Hospitalists by Source of Admission*
Demographic/Clinical VariablesEDIHT 
1st2nd 3rd4thRank
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: AHRQ, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; APR‐DRG admission ROM score, All‐Patient Refined Diagnosis‐Related Group Admission Risk of Mortality score; CC, complication or comorbidity (except under the AHRQ comorbidities where it refers to chronic complications); ED, emergency department (patients admitted from the academic health system's emergency department whose source of origination was not another hospital or ambulatory surgery site); GI, gastrointestinal; IHT, interhospital transfer (patients whose admission source was another acute care institution); MCC, major complication or comorbidity; MS‐DRG, Medicare Severity Diagnosis‐Related Group; MV, mechanical ventilation; SD, standard deviation. *All differences were significant at a level of P < 0.001. Denominator is the total number of patients. All other denominators are the total number of patients in that column. Subgroups may not sum to the total denominator due to incomplete data.

No. of patients809,86891.5 75,5248.5 
Age, y62.2 19.1  60.2 18.2  
Male381,56347.1 38,85051.4 
Female428,30352.9 36,67248.6 
Race      
White492,89460.9 54,78072.5 
Black205,30925.4 9,96813.2 
Other66,7098.1 7,77710.3 
Hispanic44,9565.6 2,9994.0 
Primary payer      
Commercial154,82619.1 17,13022.7 
Medicaid193,58523.9 15,92421.1 
Medicare445,22755.0 39,30152.0 
Other16,2302.0 3,1694.2 
Most common MS‐DRGs (top 5 for each group)      
Esophagitis, gastroenteritis, and miscellaneous digest disorders without MCC34,1164.21st1,5172.12nd
Septicemia or severe sepsis without MV 96+ hours with MCC25,7103.22nd2,6253.71st
Cellulitis without MCC21,6862.73rd8711.28th
Kidney and urinary tract infections without MCC19,9372.54th6310.921st
Chest pain18,0562.25th4950.734th
Renal failure with CC15,4781.99th1,0181.45th
GI hemorrhage with CC12,8551.612th1,2341.73rd
Respiratory system diagnosis w ventilator support4,7730.647th1,1181.64th
AHRQ comorbidities (top 5 for each group)      
Hypertension468,02617.81st39,34016.41st
Fluid and electrolyte disorders251,3399.52nd19,8258.32nd
Deficiency anemia208,7227.93rd19,6638.23rd
Diabetes without CCs190,1407.24th17,1317.14th
Chronic pulmonary disease178,1646.85th16,3196.85th
Most common procedures (top 5 for each group)      
Packed cell transfusion72,5907.01st9,7565.02nd
(Central) venous catheter insertion68,6876.72nd13,7557.01st
Hemodialysis41,5574.03rd5,3512.74th
Heart ultrasound (echocardiogram)37,7623.74th5,4412.83rd
Insert endotracheal tube25,3602.55th4,7052.46th
Continuous invasive mechanical ventilation19,2211.99th5,2802.75th
3M APR‐DRG admission ROM score      
Minor271,70233.6 18,62026.1 
Moderate286,42735.4 21,77530.5 
Major193,65223.9 20,53128.7 
Extreme58,0817.2 10,52714.7 

Primary discharge diagnoses (MS‐DRGs) varied widely, with no single diagnosis accounting for more than 4.2% of admissions in either group. The most common primary diagnoses among IHTs included severe sepsis (3.7%), esophagitis and gastroenteritis (2.1%), and gastrointestinal bleeding (1.7%). The top 5 most common AHRQ comorbidities were the same between the IHT and ED populations. A higher proportion of IHTs had at least 1 procedure performed during their hospitalization (68.5% vs 49.8%, P < 0.001). Note that ICD‐9 procedure codes include interventions such as blood transfusions and dialysis (Table 1), which may not be considered procedures in common medical parlance.

As compared with those admitted from the ED, IHTs had a higher proportion of patients categorized with major or extreme admission risk of mortality score (major + extreme, ED 31.1% vs IHT 43.5%, P < 0.001).

Overall Outcomes

IHT patients experienced a 60% longer average LOS, and a higher proportion spent time in the ICU than patients admitted through the ED (Table 2). On average, care for IHT patients cost more per day than for ED patients (Table 2). A lower proportion of IHTs were discharged home (68.6% vs 77.4% of ED patients), and a higher proportion died in the hospital (4.1% vs 1.8%) (P < 0.001 for both). Of the ED or IHT patients who died during their admission, there was no significant difference between the proportion who died within 48 hours of admission (26.4% vs 25.6%, P = 0.3693). After adjusting for age, gender, insurance status, race, ICU utilization and 3M APR‐DRG admission ROM scores, IHT was independently associated with the risk of in‐hospital death (odds ratio [OR]: 1.36, 95% CI: 1.291.43) (Table 3). The C statistic for the in‐hospital mortality model was 0.88.

Outcomes of 885,392 Academic Health System Patients Based on Source of Admission*
 ED, n = 809,868IHT, n = 75,524
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: ED, emergency department (patients admitted from the academic health system's emergency department whose source of origination was not another hospital or ambulatory surgery site); ICU, intensive care unit; IHT, interhospital transfer (patients whose admission source was another acute care institution); LOS, length of stay; SD, standard deviation. *All differences were significant at a level of P < 0.001 except the portion of deaths in 48 hours. ICU days data were available for 798,132 patients admitted from the ED and 71,054 IHT patients. Cost data were available for 792,604 patients admitted from the ED and 71,033 IHT patients.

LOS, mean SD5.0 6.98.0 13.4
ICU days, mean SD0.6 2.41.7 5.2
Patients who spent some time in the ICU14.3%29.8%
% LOS in the ICU (ICU days LOS)11.0%21.6%
Average total cost SD$10,731 $16,593$19,818 $34,665
Average cost per day (total cost LOS)$2,139$2,492
Discharged home77.4%68.6%
Died as inpatient14,869 (1.8%)3,051 (4.0%)
Died within 48 hours of admission (% total deaths)3,918 (26.4%)780 (25.6%)
Multivariable Model of In‐hospital Mortality (n = 707,248)
VariableUnadjusted OR (95% CI)Adjusted OR (95% CI)
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: APR‐DRG admission ROM score, All‐Patient Refined Diagnosis‐Related Group Admission Risk of Mortality score; CI, confidence interval; ICU, intensive care unit; IHT, interhospital transfer (patients whose admission source was another acute care institution); OR, odds ratio.

Age, y1.00 (1.001.00)1.03 (1.031.03)
Gender  
FemaleRef.Ref.
Male1.13 (1.091.70)1.05 (1.011.09)
Medicare status  
NoRef.Ref.
Yes2.14 (2.062.22)1.39 (1.331.47)
Race  
NonblackRef.Ref.
Black0.57 (0.550.60)0.77 (0.730.81)
ICU utilization  
No ICU admissionRef.Ref.
Direct admission to the ICU5.56 (5.295.84)2.25 (2.132.38)
Delayed ICU admission5.48 (5.275.69)2.46 (2.362.57)
3M APR‐DRG admission ROM score  
MinorRef.Ref.
Moderate8.71 (7.5510.05)6.28 (5.437.25)
Major43.97 (38.3150.47)25.84 (22.4729.71)
Extreme238.65 (207.69273.80)107.17 (93.07123.40)
IHT  
NoRef.Ref.
Yes2.36 (2.262.48)1.36 (1.29 1.43)

Subgroup Analyses

Table 4 demonstrates the unadjusted and adjusted results from our analysis stratified by timing of ICU utilization. IHT remained independently associated with in‐hospital mortality regardless of timing of ICU utilization.

Unadjusted and Adjusted Associations Between IHT and In‐hospital Mortality, Stratified by ICU Timing*
SubgroupIn‐hospital Mortality, n (%)Unadjusted OR [95% CI]Adjusted OR [95% CI]
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; ED, emergency department (patients admitted from the academic health system's emergency department whose source of origination was not another hospital or ambulatory surgery site); ICU, intensive care unit; IHT, interhospital transfer (patients whose admission source was another acute care institution); OR, odds ratio. *Timing of ICU utilization data were available for 650,608 of the patients admitted from the ED (80% of all ED admissions) and 56,640 of the IHT patients (75% of all IHTs).

No ICU admission, n = 552,171   
ED, n = 519,4214,913 (0.95%)Ref.Ref.
IHT, n = 32,750590 (1.80%)1.92 [1.762.09]1.68 [1.531.84]
Direct admission to the ICU, n = 44,537   
ED, n = 35,6141,733 (4.87%)Ref.Ref.
IHT, n = 8,923628 (7.04%)1.48 [1.351.63]1.24 [1.121.37]
Delayed ICU admission, n = 110,540   
ED, n = 95,5734,706 (4.92%)Ref.Ref.
IHT, n = 14,9671,068 (7.14%)1.48 [1.391.59]1.25 [1.171.35]

DISCUSSION

Our study of IHT patients ultimately discharged by hospitalists and general internists at US academic referral centers found significantly increased average LOS, costs, and in‐hospital mortality compared with patients admitted from the ED. The increased risk of mortality persisted after adjustment for patient characteristics and variables representing endogenous risk of mortality, and in more homogeneous subgroups after stratification by presence and timing of ICU utilization. These data confirm findings from single‐center studies and suggest that observations about the difference between IHT and ED populations may be generalizable across US academic hospitals.

Our work builds on 2 single‐center studies that examined mixed medical and surgical academic IHT populations from the late 1980s and early 1990s,[9, 10] and 1 studying surgical ICU patients in 2013.[17] These studies demonstrated longer average LOS, higher costs, and higher mortality rates (in both adjusted and unadjusted analyses). Our work confirmed these findings utilizing a more current, multicenter large dataset of IHT patients ultimately discharged by hospitalists and general internists. Our work is unique from a larger, more recent study[7] in that it focuses on patients transferred to academic health systems, and therefore has particular relevance to those settings. In addition, we divided patients into subpopulations based on the timing of ICU utilization, and found that in each of these populations, IHT remained independently associated with in‐hospital mortality.

Our analysis does not explain why the outcomes of IHTs are worse, but plausible contributing factors include that (1) patients chosen for IHT are at higher risk of death in ways uncaptured by established mortality risk scores, (2) referring, transferring, or accepting providers and institutions have provided inadequate care, (3) the transfer process itself involves harm, (4) socioeconomic bias in selection for IHT,[18] or (5) some combination of the above. Regardless of the causes of the worse outcomes observed in these outside‐hospital transfers, as these patients are colloquially known at accepting hospitals, they present challenges to everyone involved. Referring providers may feel a sense of urgency as these patients' needs exceed their management capabilities. The process is often time consuming and burdensome for referring and accepting providers because of poorly developed systems.[19] The transfer often takes patients further from their home and may make it more difficult for family to participate in their care. The transfer may delay care if the accepting institution cannot immediately accept the patient or if the time in transport is prolonged, which could result in decompensation at a critical juncture. For providers inheriting such patients, the stress of caring for these patients is compounded by the difficulty obtaining records about the prior hospitalization.[20] This frustrating experience is often translated into unfounded judgment of the institution that referred the patient and the care provided there.[21] It is important for hospitalists making decisions throughout the transfer process and for hospital leaders who determine staffing levels, measure the quality of care, manage hospital networks, or write hospital policy to appreciate that the transfer process itself may contribute to the challenges and poor outcomes we observe. Furthermore, regardless of the cause for the increased mortality that we observed, our findings imply that IHT patients require careful evaluation, management, and treatment.

Many accepting institutions have transfer centers that facilitate these transitions, utilizing protocols and templates to standardize the process.[22, 23] Future research should focus on the characteristics of these centers to learn which practices are most efficacious. Interventions to mitigate the known challenges of transfer (including patient selection and triage, handoff communication, and information sharing) could be tested by randomized studies at referring and accepting institutions. There may be a role for health information exchange or the development of enhanced pretransfer evaluation processes using telemedicine models; there is evidence that information sharing may reduce redundant imaging.[24] Perhaps targeted review of IHTs admitted to a non‐ICU portion of the hospital and subsequently transferred to the ICU could identify opportunities to improve triaging protocols and thus avert some of the bad outcomes observed in this subpopulation. A related future direction could be to create protected forumsusing the patient safety organization framework[25]to facilitate the discussion of interhospital transfer outcomes among the referring, transporting, and receiving parties. Lastly, future work should investigate the reasons for the different proportions of black patients in the ED versus IHT cohorts. Our finding that black race was associated with lower risk of mortality has been previously reported but may also benefit from more investigation.[26]

There are several limitations of our work. First, despite extensive adjustment for patient characteristics, due to the observational nature of our study it is still possible that IHTs differ from ED admissions in ways that were unaccounted for in our analysis, and which could be associated with increased mortality independent of the transfer process itself. We are unable to characterize features of the transfer process, such as the reason for transfer, differences in transfer processes among hospitals, or the distance and mode of travel, which may influence outcomes.[27] Because we used administrative data, variations in coding could incorrectly estimate the complexity or severity of illness on admission, which is a previously described risk.[28] In addition, although our dataset was very large, it was limited by incomplete charge data, which limited our ability to measure ICU utilization in our full cohort. The hospitals missing ICU charge data are of variable sizes and are distributed around the country, limiting the chance of systematic bias. Finally, in some settings, hospitalists may serve as the discharging physician for patients admitted to other services such as the ICU, introducing heterogeneity and bias to the sample. We attempted to mitigate such bias through our subgroup analysis, which allowed for comparisons within more homogeneous patient groupings.

In conclusion, our large multicenter study of academic health systems confirms the findings of prior single‐center academic studies and a large general population study that interhospital transfer patients have an increased average LOS, costs, and adjusted in‐hospital mortality than patients admitted from the ED. This difference in mortality persisted even after controlling for several other predictors of mortality. Our findings emphasize the need for future studies designed to clarify the reason for the increased risk and identify targets for interventions to improve outcomes for the interhospital transfer population.

Acknowledgements

The authors gratefully acknowledge Zachary Goldberger and Tom Gallagher for their critical reviews of this article.

Disclosures

Dr. Herzig was funded by grant number K23AG042459 from the National Institute on Aging. The funding organization had no involvement in any aspect of the study, including design and conduct of the study; collection, management, analysis, and interpretation of the data; and preparation, review, or approval of the manuscript. The authors report no conflicts of interest.

Interhospital transfers (IHTs) to academic medical centers (AMCs) or their affiliated hospitals may benefit patients who require unique specialty and procedural services. However, IHTs also introduce a potentially risky transition of care for patients suffering from complex or unstable medical problems.[1] Components of this risk include the dangers associated with transportation and the disrupted continuity of care that may lead to delays or errors in care.[2, 3] Furthermore, referring and accepting providers may face barriers to optimal handoffs including a lack of shared communication standards and difficulty accessing external medical records.[3, 4, 5] Although some authors have recommended the creation of formal guidelines for interhospital transfer processes for all patients to mitigate the risks of transfer, the available guidelines governing the IHT triage and communication process are limited to critically ill patients.[6]

A recent study of a diverse patient and hospital dataset demonstrated that interhospital transfer patients have a higher risk of mortality, increased length of stay (LOS), and increased risk of adverse events as compared with non‐transfer patients.[7] However, it is unknown if these findings persist in the population of patients transferred specifically to AMCs or their affiliated hospitals (the combination is hereafter referred to as academic health systems [AHSs]). AMCs provide a disproportionate share of IHT care for complex patients and have a vested interest in improving the outcomes of these transitions.[8] Prior single‐center studies of acute care adult medical patients accepted to AMCs have shown that IHT is associated with a longer LOS, increased in‐hospital mortality, and higher resource use.[9, 10] However, it is difficult to generalize from single‐center studies due to the variation in referral practices, geography, and network characteristics. Additionally, AMC referral systems, patient mix, and utilization of hospitalists have likely changed substantially in the nearly 2 decades since those reports were published.

Hospitalists and general internists often manage the transfer acceptance processes for internal medicine services at receiving hospitals, helping to triage and coordinate care for IHT patients. As a result, it is important for hospitalists to understand the characteristics and outcomes of the IHT population. In addition to informing the decision making around transfer for a given patient, such an understanding is the foundation for helping providers and institutions begin to systematically identify and mitigate peritransfer risks.

We conducted this large multicenter study to describe the characteristics and outcomes of a current, nationally representative IHT patient population discharged by hospitalists and general internists at AHSs. To identify unique features of the IHT population, we compared patients transferred from another hospital to an AHS to those admitted to the AHS directly from the AHS's emergency department (ED). Based on our anecdotal experiences and the prior single‐center study findings in adult medical populations,[9, 10] we hypothesized that the IHT population would be sicker, stay in the hospital and intensive care unit (ICU) longer, and have higher costs and in‐hospital mortality than ED patients. Although there may be fundamental differences between the 2 groups related to disease and patient condition, we hypothesized that outcome differences would persist even after adjusting for patient factors such as demographics, disease‐specific risk of mortality, and ICU utilization.

PATIENTS AND METHODS

We conducted a retrospective cohort study using data from the University HealthSystem Consortium (UHC) Clinical Database and Resource Manager (CDB/RM). UHC is an alliance of 120 academic medical centers and 300 of their affiliated hospitals for the purposes of collaboration on performance improvement. Each year, a subset of participating hospitals submits data on all of their inpatient discharges to the CDB/RM, which totals approximately 5 million records. The CDB/RM includes information from billing forms including demographics, diagnoses, and procedures as captured by International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD‐9) codes, discharge disposition, and line item charge detail for the type of bed (eg, floor, ICU). Most hospitals also provide detailed charge information including pharmacy, imaging, blood products, lab tests, and supplies. Some hospitals do not provide any charge data. The Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and University of Washington institutional review boards reviewed and approved the conduct of this study.

We included all inpatients discharged by hospitalists or general internal medicine physicians from UHC hospitals between April 1, 2011 and March 31, 2012. We excluded minors, pregnant patients, and prisoners. One hundred fifty‐eight adult academic medical centers and affiliated hospitals submitted data throughout this time period. Our primary independent variable, IHT status, was defined by patients whose admission source was another acute care institution. ED admissions were defined as patients admitted from the AHS ED whose source of origination was not another hospital or ambulatory surgery site.

Admission Characteristics

Admission characteristics of interest included age, gender, insurance status, the most common diagnoses in each cohort based on Medicare Severity Diagnosis‐Related Group (MS‐DRG), the most common Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) comorbitidies,[11] the most common procedures, and the admission 3M All‐Patient Refined Diagnosis‐Related Group (APR‐DRG) risk of mortality (ROM) scores. 3M APR‐DRG ROM scores are proprietary categorical measures specific to the base APR‐DRG to which a patient is assigned, which are calculated using data available at the time of admission, including comorbid condition diagnosis codes, age, procedure codes, and principal diagnosis codes. A patient can fall into 1 of 4 categories with this score: minor, moderate, major, or extreme.[12]

Outcomes

Our primary outcome of interest was in‐hospital mortality. Secondary outcomes included LOS, the cost of care, ICU utilization, and discharge destination. The cost of care is a standardized estimate of the direct costs based on an adjustment of the charges submitted by CDB/RM participants. If an IHT is triaged through a receiving hospital's ED, the cost of care reflects those charges as well as the inpatient charges.

Statistical Analysis

We used descriptive statistics to characterize the IHT and ED patient populations. For bivariate comparisons of continuous variables, 2‐sample t tests with unequal variance were used. For categorical variables, 2 analysis was performed. We assessed the impact of IHT status on in‐hospital mortality using logistic regression to estimate unadjusted and adjusted relative risks, 95% confidence intervals (CIs), and P values. We included age, gender, insurance status, race, timing of ICU utilization, and 3M APR‐DRG ROM scores as independent variables. Prior studies have used this type of risk‐adjustment methodology with 3M APR‐DRG ROM scores,[13, 14, 15] including with interhospital transfer patients.[16] For all comparisons, a P value of <0.05 was considered statistically significant. Our sample size was determined by the data available for the 1‐year period.

Subgroup Analyses

We performed a stratified analysis based on the timing of ICU transfer to allow for additional comparisons of mortality within more homogeneous patient groups, and to control for the possibility that delays in ICU transfer could explain the association between IHT and in‐hospital mortality. We determined whether and when a patient spent time in the ICU based on daily accommodation charges. If a patient was charged for an ICU bed on the day of admission, we coded them as a direct ICU admission, and if the first ICU bed charge was on a subsequent day, they were coded as a delayed ICU admission. Approximately 20% of patients did not have the data necessary to determine the timing of ICU utilization, because the hospitals where they received care did not submit detailed charge data to the UHC.

Data analysis was performed by the UHC. Analysis was performed using Stata version 10 (StataCorp, College Station, TX). For all comparisons, a P value of <0.05 was considered significant.

RESULTS

Patient Characteristics

We identified 885,392 patients who met study criteria: 75,524 patients admitted as an IHT and 809,868 patients admitted from the ED. The proportion of each hospital's admissions that were IHTs that met our study criteria varied widely (median 9%, 25th percentile 3%, 75th percentile 14%). The average age and gender of the IHT and ED populations were similar and reflective of a nationally representative adult inpatient sample (Table 1). Racial compositions of the populations were notable for a higher portion of black patients in the ED admission group than the IHT group (25.4% vs 13.2%, P < 0.001). A slightly higher portion of the IHT population was covered by commercial insurance compared with the ED admissions (22.7% vs 19.1%, P < 0.001).

Characteristics of 885,392 Patients Discharged by Academic General Internists or Hospitalists by Source of Admission*
Demographic/Clinical VariablesEDIHT 
1st2nd 3rd4thRank
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: AHRQ, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; APR‐DRG admission ROM score, All‐Patient Refined Diagnosis‐Related Group Admission Risk of Mortality score; CC, complication or comorbidity (except under the AHRQ comorbidities where it refers to chronic complications); ED, emergency department (patients admitted from the academic health system's emergency department whose source of origination was not another hospital or ambulatory surgery site); GI, gastrointestinal; IHT, interhospital transfer (patients whose admission source was another acute care institution); MCC, major complication or comorbidity; MS‐DRG, Medicare Severity Diagnosis‐Related Group; MV, mechanical ventilation; SD, standard deviation. *All differences were significant at a level of P < 0.001. Denominator is the total number of patients. All other denominators are the total number of patients in that column. Subgroups may not sum to the total denominator due to incomplete data.

No. of patients809,86891.5 75,5248.5 
Age, y62.2 19.1  60.2 18.2  
Male381,56347.1 38,85051.4 
Female428,30352.9 36,67248.6 
Race      
White492,89460.9 54,78072.5 
Black205,30925.4 9,96813.2 
Other66,7098.1 7,77710.3 
Hispanic44,9565.6 2,9994.0 
Primary payer      
Commercial154,82619.1 17,13022.7 
Medicaid193,58523.9 15,92421.1 
Medicare445,22755.0 39,30152.0 
Other16,2302.0 3,1694.2 
Most common MS‐DRGs (top 5 for each group)      
Esophagitis, gastroenteritis, and miscellaneous digest disorders without MCC34,1164.21st1,5172.12nd
Septicemia or severe sepsis without MV 96+ hours with MCC25,7103.22nd2,6253.71st
Cellulitis without MCC21,6862.73rd8711.28th
Kidney and urinary tract infections without MCC19,9372.54th6310.921st
Chest pain18,0562.25th4950.734th
Renal failure with CC15,4781.99th1,0181.45th
GI hemorrhage with CC12,8551.612th1,2341.73rd
Respiratory system diagnosis w ventilator support4,7730.647th1,1181.64th
AHRQ comorbidities (top 5 for each group)      
Hypertension468,02617.81st39,34016.41st
Fluid and electrolyte disorders251,3399.52nd19,8258.32nd
Deficiency anemia208,7227.93rd19,6638.23rd
Diabetes without CCs190,1407.24th17,1317.14th
Chronic pulmonary disease178,1646.85th16,3196.85th
Most common procedures (top 5 for each group)      
Packed cell transfusion72,5907.01st9,7565.02nd
(Central) venous catheter insertion68,6876.72nd13,7557.01st
Hemodialysis41,5574.03rd5,3512.74th
Heart ultrasound (echocardiogram)37,7623.74th5,4412.83rd
Insert endotracheal tube25,3602.55th4,7052.46th
Continuous invasive mechanical ventilation19,2211.99th5,2802.75th
3M APR‐DRG admission ROM score      
Minor271,70233.6 18,62026.1 
Moderate286,42735.4 21,77530.5 
Major193,65223.9 20,53128.7 
Extreme58,0817.2 10,52714.7 

Primary discharge diagnoses (MS‐DRGs) varied widely, with no single diagnosis accounting for more than 4.2% of admissions in either group. The most common primary diagnoses among IHTs included severe sepsis (3.7%), esophagitis and gastroenteritis (2.1%), and gastrointestinal bleeding (1.7%). The top 5 most common AHRQ comorbidities were the same between the IHT and ED populations. A higher proportion of IHTs had at least 1 procedure performed during their hospitalization (68.5% vs 49.8%, P < 0.001). Note that ICD‐9 procedure codes include interventions such as blood transfusions and dialysis (Table 1), which may not be considered procedures in common medical parlance.

As compared with those admitted from the ED, IHTs had a higher proportion of patients categorized with major or extreme admission risk of mortality score (major + extreme, ED 31.1% vs IHT 43.5%, P < 0.001).

Overall Outcomes

IHT patients experienced a 60% longer average LOS, and a higher proportion spent time in the ICU than patients admitted through the ED (Table 2). On average, care for IHT patients cost more per day than for ED patients (Table 2). A lower proportion of IHTs were discharged home (68.6% vs 77.4% of ED patients), and a higher proportion died in the hospital (4.1% vs 1.8%) (P < 0.001 for both). Of the ED or IHT patients who died during their admission, there was no significant difference between the proportion who died within 48 hours of admission (26.4% vs 25.6%, P = 0.3693). After adjusting for age, gender, insurance status, race, ICU utilization and 3M APR‐DRG admission ROM scores, IHT was independently associated with the risk of in‐hospital death (odds ratio [OR]: 1.36, 95% CI: 1.291.43) (Table 3). The C statistic for the in‐hospital mortality model was 0.88.

Outcomes of 885,392 Academic Health System Patients Based on Source of Admission*
 ED, n = 809,868IHT, n = 75,524
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: ED, emergency department (patients admitted from the academic health system's emergency department whose source of origination was not another hospital or ambulatory surgery site); ICU, intensive care unit; IHT, interhospital transfer (patients whose admission source was another acute care institution); LOS, length of stay; SD, standard deviation. *All differences were significant at a level of P < 0.001 except the portion of deaths in 48 hours. ICU days data were available for 798,132 patients admitted from the ED and 71,054 IHT patients. Cost data were available for 792,604 patients admitted from the ED and 71,033 IHT patients.

LOS, mean SD5.0 6.98.0 13.4
ICU days, mean SD0.6 2.41.7 5.2
Patients who spent some time in the ICU14.3%29.8%
% LOS in the ICU (ICU days LOS)11.0%21.6%
Average total cost SD$10,731 $16,593$19,818 $34,665
Average cost per day (total cost LOS)$2,139$2,492
Discharged home77.4%68.6%
Died as inpatient14,869 (1.8%)3,051 (4.0%)
Died within 48 hours of admission (% total deaths)3,918 (26.4%)780 (25.6%)
Multivariable Model of In‐hospital Mortality (n = 707,248)
VariableUnadjusted OR (95% CI)Adjusted OR (95% CI)
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: APR‐DRG admission ROM score, All‐Patient Refined Diagnosis‐Related Group Admission Risk of Mortality score; CI, confidence interval; ICU, intensive care unit; IHT, interhospital transfer (patients whose admission source was another acute care institution); OR, odds ratio.

Age, y1.00 (1.001.00)1.03 (1.031.03)
Gender  
FemaleRef.Ref.
Male1.13 (1.091.70)1.05 (1.011.09)
Medicare status  
NoRef.Ref.
Yes2.14 (2.062.22)1.39 (1.331.47)
Race  
NonblackRef.Ref.
Black0.57 (0.550.60)0.77 (0.730.81)
ICU utilization  
No ICU admissionRef.Ref.
Direct admission to the ICU5.56 (5.295.84)2.25 (2.132.38)
Delayed ICU admission5.48 (5.275.69)2.46 (2.362.57)
3M APR‐DRG admission ROM score  
MinorRef.Ref.
Moderate8.71 (7.5510.05)6.28 (5.437.25)
Major43.97 (38.3150.47)25.84 (22.4729.71)
Extreme238.65 (207.69273.80)107.17 (93.07123.40)
IHT  
NoRef.Ref.
Yes2.36 (2.262.48)1.36 (1.29 1.43)

Subgroup Analyses

Table 4 demonstrates the unadjusted and adjusted results from our analysis stratified by timing of ICU utilization. IHT remained independently associated with in‐hospital mortality regardless of timing of ICU utilization.

Unadjusted and Adjusted Associations Between IHT and In‐hospital Mortality, Stratified by ICU Timing*
SubgroupIn‐hospital Mortality, n (%)Unadjusted OR [95% CI]Adjusted OR [95% CI]
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; ED, emergency department (patients admitted from the academic health system's emergency department whose source of origination was not another hospital or ambulatory surgery site); ICU, intensive care unit; IHT, interhospital transfer (patients whose admission source was another acute care institution); OR, odds ratio. *Timing of ICU utilization data were available for 650,608 of the patients admitted from the ED (80% of all ED admissions) and 56,640 of the IHT patients (75% of all IHTs).

No ICU admission, n = 552,171   
ED, n = 519,4214,913 (0.95%)Ref.Ref.
IHT, n = 32,750590 (1.80%)1.92 [1.762.09]1.68 [1.531.84]
Direct admission to the ICU, n = 44,537   
ED, n = 35,6141,733 (4.87%)Ref.Ref.
IHT, n = 8,923628 (7.04%)1.48 [1.351.63]1.24 [1.121.37]
Delayed ICU admission, n = 110,540   
ED, n = 95,5734,706 (4.92%)Ref.Ref.
IHT, n = 14,9671,068 (7.14%)1.48 [1.391.59]1.25 [1.171.35]

DISCUSSION

Our study of IHT patients ultimately discharged by hospitalists and general internists at US academic referral centers found significantly increased average LOS, costs, and in‐hospital mortality compared with patients admitted from the ED. The increased risk of mortality persisted after adjustment for patient characteristics and variables representing endogenous risk of mortality, and in more homogeneous subgroups after stratification by presence and timing of ICU utilization. These data confirm findings from single‐center studies and suggest that observations about the difference between IHT and ED populations may be generalizable across US academic hospitals.

Our work builds on 2 single‐center studies that examined mixed medical and surgical academic IHT populations from the late 1980s and early 1990s,[9, 10] and 1 studying surgical ICU patients in 2013.[17] These studies demonstrated longer average LOS, higher costs, and higher mortality rates (in both adjusted and unadjusted analyses). Our work confirmed these findings utilizing a more current, multicenter large dataset of IHT patients ultimately discharged by hospitalists and general internists. Our work is unique from a larger, more recent study[7] in that it focuses on patients transferred to academic health systems, and therefore has particular relevance to those settings. In addition, we divided patients into subpopulations based on the timing of ICU utilization, and found that in each of these populations, IHT remained independently associated with in‐hospital mortality.

Our analysis does not explain why the outcomes of IHTs are worse, but plausible contributing factors include that (1) patients chosen for IHT are at higher risk of death in ways uncaptured by established mortality risk scores, (2) referring, transferring, or accepting providers and institutions have provided inadequate care, (3) the transfer process itself involves harm, (4) socioeconomic bias in selection for IHT,[18] or (5) some combination of the above. Regardless of the causes of the worse outcomes observed in these outside‐hospital transfers, as these patients are colloquially known at accepting hospitals, they present challenges to everyone involved. Referring providers may feel a sense of urgency as these patients' needs exceed their management capabilities. The process is often time consuming and burdensome for referring and accepting providers because of poorly developed systems.[19] The transfer often takes patients further from their home and may make it more difficult for family to participate in their care. The transfer may delay care if the accepting institution cannot immediately accept the patient or if the time in transport is prolonged, which could result in decompensation at a critical juncture. For providers inheriting such patients, the stress of caring for these patients is compounded by the difficulty obtaining records about the prior hospitalization.[20] This frustrating experience is often translated into unfounded judgment of the institution that referred the patient and the care provided there.[21] It is important for hospitalists making decisions throughout the transfer process and for hospital leaders who determine staffing levels, measure the quality of care, manage hospital networks, or write hospital policy to appreciate that the transfer process itself may contribute to the challenges and poor outcomes we observe. Furthermore, regardless of the cause for the increased mortality that we observed, our findings imply that IHT patients require careful evaluation, management, and treatment.

Many accepting institutions have transfer centers that facilitate these transitions, utilizing protocols and templates to standardize the process.[22, 23] Future research should focus on the characteristics of these centers to learn which practices are most efficacious. Interventions to mitigate the known challenges of transfer (including patient selection and triage, handoff communication, and information sharing) could be tested by randomized studies at referring and accepting institutions. There may be a role for health information exchange or the development of enhanced pretransfer evaluation processes using telemedicine models; there is evidence that information sharing may reduce redundant imaging.[24] Perhaps targeted review of IHTs admitted to a non‐ICU portion of the hospital and subsequently transferred to the ICU could identify opportunities to improve triaging protocols and thus avert some of the bad outcomes observed in this subpopulation. A related future direction could be to create protected forumsusing the patient safety organization framework[25]to facilitate the discussion of interhospital transfer outcomes among the referring, transporting, and receiving parties. Lastly, future work should investigate the reasons for the different proportions of black patients in the ED versus IHT cohorts. Our finding that black race was associated with lower risk of mortality has been previously reported but may also benefit from more investigation.[26]

There are several limitations of our work. First, despite extensive adjustment for patient characteristics, due to the observational nature of our study it is still possible that IHTs differ from ED admissions in ways that were unaccounted for in our analysis, and which could be associated with increased mortality independent of the transfer process itself. We are unable to characterize features of the transfer process, such as the reason for transfer, differences in transfer processes among hospitals, or the distance and mode of travel, which may influence outcomes.[27] Because we used administrative data, variations in coding could incorrectly estimate the complexity or severity of illness on admission, which is a previously described risk.[28] In addition, although our dataset was very large, it was limited by incomplete charge data, which limited our ability to measure ICU utilization in our full cohort. The hospitals missing ICU charge data are of variable sizes and are distributed around the country, limiting the chance of systematic bias. Finally, in some settings, hospitalists may serve as the discharging physician for patients admitted to other services such as the ICU, introducing heterogeneity and bias to the sample. We attempted to mitigate such bias through our subgroup analysis, which allowed for comparisons within more homogeneous patient groupings.

In conclusion, our large multicenter study of academic health systems confirms the findings of prior single‐center academic studies and a large general population study that interhospital transfer patients have an increased average LOS, costs, and adjusted in‐hospital mortality than patients admitted from the ED. This difference in mortality persisted even after controlling for several other predictors of mortality. Our findings emphasize the need for future studies designed to clarify the reason for the increased risk and identify targets for interventions to improve outcomes for the interhospital transfer population.

Acknowledgements

The authors gratefully acknowledge Zachary Goldberger and Tom Gallagher for their critical reviews of this article.

Disclosures

Dr. Herzig was funded by grant number K23AG042459 from the National Institute on Aging. The funding organization had no involvement in any aspect of the study, including design and conduct of the study; collection, management, analysis, and interpretation of the data; and preparation, review, or approval of the manuscript. The authors report no conflicts of interest.

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  8. Bernard AM, Hayward RA, Rosevear J, Chun H, McMahon LF. Comparing the hospitalizations of transfer and non‐transfer patients in an academic medical center. Acad Med. 1996;71(3):262266.
  9. Gordon HS, Rosenthal GE. Impact of interhospital transfers on outcomes in an academic medical center. Implications for profiling hospital quality. Med Care. 1996;34(4):295309.
  10. Elixhauser A, Steiner C, Harris DR, Coffey RM. Comorbidity measures for use with administrative data. Med Care. 1998;36(1):827.
  11. Hughes J. 3M HIS: APR DRG classification software—overview. Mortality Measurement. Available at: http://archive.ahrq.gov/professionals/quality‐patient‐safety/quality‐resources/tools/mortality/Hughessumm.html. Accessed June 14, 2011.
  12. Romano PS, Chan BK. Risk‐adjusting acute myocardial infarction mortality: are APR‐DRGs the right tool? Health Serv Res. 2000;34(7):14691489.
  13. Singh JA, Kwoh CK, Boudreau RM, Lee G‐C, Ibrahim SA. Hospital volume and surgical outcomes after elective hip/knee arthroplasty: a risk‐adjusted analysis of a large regional database. Arthritis Rheum. 2011;63(8):25312539.
  14. Carretta HJ, Chukmaitov A, Tang A, Shin J. Examination of hospital characteristics and patient quality outcomes using four inpatient quality indicators and 30‐day all‐cause mortality. Am J Med Qual. 2013;28(1):4655.
  15. Wiggers JK, Guitton TG, Smith RM, Vrahas MS, Ring D. Observed and expected outcomes in transfer and nontransfer patients with a hip fracture. J Orthop Trauma. 2011;25(11):666669.
  16. Arthur KR, Kelz RR, Mills AM, et al. Interhospital transfer: an independent risk factor for mortality in the surgical intensive care unit. Am Surg. 2013;79(9):909913.
  17. Hanmer J, Lu X, Rosenthal GE, Cram P. Insurance status and the transfer of hospitalized patients: an observational study. Ann Intern Med. 2014;160(2):8190.
  18. Bosk EA, Veinot T, Iwashyna TJ. Which patients and where: a qualitative study of patient transfers from community hospitals. Med Care. 2011;49(6):592598.
  19. Ehrmann DE. Overwhelmed and uninspired by lack of coordinated care: a call to action for new physicians. Acad Med. 2013;88(11):16001602.
  20. Graham JD. The outside hospital. Ann Intern Med. 2013;159(7):500501.
  21. Strickler J, Amor J, McLellan M. Untangling the lines: using a transfer center to assist with interfacility transfers. Nurs Econ. 2003;21(2):9496.
  22. Pesanka DA, Greenhouse PK, Rack LL, et al. Ticket to ride: reducing handoff risk during hospital patient transport. J Nurs Care Qual. 2009;24(2):109115.
  23. Sodickson A, Opraseuth J, Ledbetter S. Outside imaging in emergency department transfer patients: CD import reduces rates of subsequent imaging utilization. Radiology. 2011;260(2):408413.
  24. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Patient Safety Organization (PSO) Program. Available at: http://www.pso.ahrq.gov. Accessed July 7, 2011.
  25. Signorello LB, Cohen SS, Williams DR, Munro HM, Hargreaves MK, Blot WJ. Socioeconomic status, race, and mortality: a prospective cohort study. Am J Public Health. 2014;104(12):e98e107.
  26. Durairaj L, Will JG, Torner JC, Doebbeling BN. Prognostic factors for mortality following interhospital transfers to the medical intensive care unit of a tertiary referral center. Crit Care Med. 2003;31(7):19811986.
  27. Goldman LE, Chu PW, Osmond D, Bindman A. The accuracy of present‐on‐admission reporting in administrative data. Health Serv Res. 2011;46(6 pt 1):19461962.
References
  1. Iwashyna TJ. The incomplete infrastructure for interhospital patient transfer. Crit Care Med. 2012;40(8):24702478.
  2. Hains I. AHRQ WebM23(1):6875.
  3. Hickey EC, Savage AM. Improving the quality of inter‐hospital transfers. J Qual Assur. 1991;13(4):1620.
  4. Vilensky D, MacDonald RD. Communication errors in dispatch of air medical transport. Prehosp Emerg Care. 2011;15(1):3943.
  5. Warren J, Fromm RE, Orr RA, Rotello LC, Horst HM. Guidelines for the inter‐ and intrahospital transport of critically ill patients. Crit Care Med. 2004;32(1):256262.
  6. Hernandez‐Boussard T, Davies S, McDonald K, Wang NE. Interhospital facility transfers in the United States: a nationwide outcomes study [published online November 13, 2014]. J Patient Saf. doi: 10.1097/PTS.0000000000000148.
  7. Wyatt SM, Moy E, Levin RJ, et al. Patients transferred to academic medical centers and other hospitals: characteristics, resource use, and outcomes. Acad Med. 1997;72(10):921930.
  8. Bernard AM, Hayward RA, Rosevear J, Chun H, McMahon LF. Comparing the hospitalizations of transfer and non‐transfer patients in an academic medical center. Acad Med. 1996;71(3):262266.
  9. Gordon HS, Rosenthal GE. Impact of interhospital transfers on outcomes in an academic medical center. Implications for profiling hospital quality. Med Care. 1996;34(4):295309.
  10. Elixhauser A, Steiner C, Harris DR, Coffey RM. Comorbidity measures for use with administrative data. Med Care. 1998;36(1):827.
  11. Hughes J. 3M HIS: APR DRG classification software—overview. Mortality Measurement. Available at: http://archive.ahrq.gov/professionals/quality‐patient‐safety/quality‐resources/tools/mortality/Hughessumm.html. Accessed June 14, 2011.
  12. Romano PS, Chan BK. Risk‐adjusting acute myocardial infarction mortality: are APR‐DRGs the right tool? Health Serv Res. 2000;34(7):14691489.
  13. Singh JA, Kwoh CK, Boudreau RM, Lee G‐C, Ibrahim SA. Hospital volume and surgical outcomes after elective hip/knee arthroplasty: a risk‐adjusted analysis of a large regional database. Arthritis Rheum. 2011;63(8):25312539.
  14. Carretta HJ, Chukmaitov A, Tang A, Shin J. Examination of hospital characteristics and patient quality outcomes using four inpatient quality indicators and 30‐day all‐cause mortality. Am J Med Qual. 2013;28(1):4655.
  15. Wiggers JK, Guitton TG, Smith RM, Vrahas MS, Ring D. Observed and expected outcomes in transfer and nontransfer patients with a hip fracture. J Orthop Trauma. 2011;25(11):666669.
  16. Arthur KR, Kelz RR, Mills AM, et al. Interhospital transfer: an independent risk factor for mortality in the surgical intensive care unit. Am Surg. 2013;79(9):909913.
  17. Hanmer J, Lu X, Rosenthal GE, Cram P. Insurance status and the transfer of hospitalized patients: an observational study. Ann Intern Med. 2014;160(2):8190.
  18. Bosk EA, Veinot T, Iwashyna TJ. Which patients and where: a qualitative study of patient transfers from community hospitals. Med Care. 2011;49(6):592598.
  19. Ehrmann DE. Overwhelmed and uninspired by lack of coordinated care: a call to action for new physicians. Acad Med. 2013;88(11):16001602.
  20. Graham JD. The outside hospital. Ann Intern Med. 2013;159(7):500501.
  21. Strickler J, Amor J, McLellan M. Untangling the lines: using a transfer center to assist with interfacility transfers. Nurs Econ. 2003;21(2):9496.
  22. Pesanka DA, Greenhouse PK, Rack LL, et al. Ticket to ride: reducing handoff risk during hospital patient transport. J Nurs Care Qual. 2009;24(2):109115.
  23. Sodickson A, Opraseuth J, Ledbetter S. Outside imaging in emergency department transfer patients: CD import reduces rates of subsequent imaging utilization. Radiology. 2011;260(2):408413.
  24. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Patient Safety Organization (PSO) Program. Available at: http://www.pso.ahrq.gov. Accessed July 7, 2011.
  25. Signorello LB, Cohen SS, Williams DR, Munro HM, Hargreaves MK, Blot WJ. Socioeconomic status, race, and mortality: a prospective cohort study. Am J Public Health. 2014;104(12):e98e107.
  26. Durairaj L, Will JG, Torner JC, Doebbeling BN. Prognostic factors for mortality following interhospital transfers to the medical intensive care unit of a tertiary referral center. Crit Care Med. 2003;31(7):19811986.
  27. Goldman LE, Chu PW, Osmond D, Bindman A. The accuracy of present‐on‐admission reporting in administrative data. Health Serv Res. 2011;46(6 pt 1):19461962.
Issue
Journal of Hospital Medicine - 11(4)
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Journal of Hospital Medicine - 11(4)
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245-250
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Interhospital transfer patients discharged by academic hospitalists and general internists: Characteristics and outcomes
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Interhospital transfer patients discharged by academic hospitalists and general internists: Characteristics and outcomes
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Address for correspondence and reprint requests: Lauge Sokol‐Hessner, MD, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Hospital Medicine, W/PBS‐2, 330 Brookline Ave., Boston, MA 02215; Telephone: 617‐754‐4677; Fax: 617‐632‐0215; E‐mail: lhessner@bidmc.harvard.edu
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