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Erschienen in: Health Services and Outcomes Research Methodology 1/2008

01.03.2008

Waiting times and hospitalizations for ambulatory care sensitive conditions

verfasst von: Julia C. Prentice, Steven D. Pizer

Erschienen in: Health Services and Outcomes Research Methodology | Ausgabe 1/2008

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Abstract

Long waits for health care are hypothesized to cause negative health outcomes due to delays in diagnosis and treatment. This study uses administrative data to examine the relationship between time spent waiting for outpatient care and the risk of hospitalization for an ambulatory care sensitive condition (ACSC). Data on the number of days until the next available appointment were extracted from Veterans Affairs (VA) medical centers. Two methodological issues arose. First, the simultaneous determination of individual health status and wait times due to medical triage was overcome by developing an exogenous wait time measure. Second, selection bias due to unobserved case mix differences was minimized by separating in time the sample selection period from the period when wait times and outcomes were measured. Exogenous facility-level wait time was the main variable of interest in a fixed effects stacked heteroskedastic probit regression model that predicted the probability of ACSC hospitalization in each month of a six-month period. There was a significant and positive relationship between facility-level wait times and the probability of experiencing an ACSC hospitalization, especially for facility-level wait times of 29 days or more. Further research is needed to replicate these findings in other populations and among those with different clinical histories. As well, policymakers and researchers need an improved understanding of the causes of long wait times and interventions to decrease wait times.
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Fußnoten
1
Hospitalizations that potentially could have been prevented through appropriate outpatient care have been referred to as “ambulatory care sensitive,” “preventable,” “avoidable,” or “prevention quality indicators” (AHRQ 2001; Culler et al. 1998). We use the term ACSC hospitalization throughout this article.
 
2
The wait time measure is based on next available appointments versus follow-up appointments that may be scheduled in advance. This may reduce the impact of waiting time on health outcomes. However, patients cannot request follow-up appointments until the doctor has requested to see them again. Our wait time measure based on next available appointments is an overall measure of congestion at different VA facilities and both newly requested and follow-up appointments at facilities with greater congestion will be delayed. Furthermore, patients who need to reschedule follow-up visits or who have complications between follow-up visits will require next available appointments and rely on the appointment type our wait time measure is based on.
 
3
For ease of presentation, “facility” and “parent station” are used interchangeably throughout the article to refer to a VA parent station.
 
4
Only 37% of the clinic visits in the entire sample were to a geriatric outpatient clinic. Thus, the sample used a wide range of health care services beyond geriatric outpatient clinics.
 
5
In the final sample, 12% of the clinic appointments were imputed with 0.
 
6
The standard correction for selection bias involves estimating a first stage selection model and explicitly accounting for the expected value of the disturbance term from that model in the second stage equation of interest. Because we do not have veterans in our sample who chose not to come to a VA medical center for care, we cannot take this approach.
 
7
Our previous work examining the relationship between wait times and mortality included the same explanatory variables to risk-adjust for prior individual health status presented in this article. However, the mortality models also included whether or not a patient had a 50% or more service-connected disability (e.g. a condition or disability that the VA has determined was incurred or aggravated by military service). In models predicting ACSC hospitalization, service-connected disability had no significant effect. It was excluded in the final models because of the loss of observations due to missing values on service-connected disability.
 
8
Following previous work (e.g. Selim et al. 2002), the Deyo et al. (1992) translation of the original Charlson index that identifies conditions by ICD-9-CM codes was used. Conditions were weighted using the original Charlson weighting system (Charlson et al. 1987).
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Waiting times and hospitalizations for ambulatory care sensitive conditions
verfasst von
Julia C. Prentice
Steven D. Pizer
Publikationsdatum
01.03.2008
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Health Services and Outcomes Research Methodology / Ausgabe 1/2008
Print ISSN: 1387-3741
Elektronische ISSN: 1572-9400
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10742-007-0024-5