Sociocultural and Demographic Factors Predict Readmissions for General Surgery Patients

Author:

Kovoor Joshua G.ORCID,Bacchi Stephen,Gupta Aashray K.,Nann Silas D.,Stretton Brandon,Chong Esther H. L.,Hewitt Joseph N.,Bhanushali Ameya,Nathin Kayla,Aujayeb Nidhi,Lu Amy,Ovenden Christopher D.,John Athul,Reid Jessica L.,Gluck Samuel,Liew Danny,Reddi Benjamin A.,Hugh Thomas J.,Dobbins Christopher,Padbury Robert T.,Hewett Peter J.,Trochsler Markus I.,Maddern Guy J.

Abstract

Abstract Introduction Readmission is a poor outcome for both patients and healthcare systems. The association of certain sociocultural and demographic characteristics with likelihood of readmission is uncertain in general surgical patients. Method A multi-centre retrospective cohort study of consecutive unique individuals who survived to discharge during general surgical admissions was conducted. Sociocultural and demographic variables were evaluated alongside clinical parameters (considered both as raw values and their proportion of change in the 1–2 days prior to admission) for their association with 7 and 30 days readmission using logistic regression. Results There were 12,701 individuals included, with 304 (2.4%) individuals readmitted within 7 days, and 921 (7.3%) readmitted within 30 days. When incorporating absolute values of clinical parameters in the model, age was the only variable significantly associated with 7-day readmission, and primary language and presence of religion were the only variables significantly associated with 30-day readmission. When incorporating change in clinical parameters between the 1–2 days prior to discharge, primary language and religion were predictive of 30-day readmission. When controlling for changes in clinical parameters, only higher comorbidity burden (represented by higher Charlson comorbidity index score) was associated with increased likelihood of 30-day readmission. Conclusions Sociocultural and demographic patient factors such as primary language, presence of religion, age, and comorbidity burden predict the likelihood of 7 and 30-day hospital readmission after general surgery. These findings support early implementation a postoperative care model that integrates all biopsychosocial domains across multiple disciplines of healthcare.

Funder

The University of Adelaide

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Surgery

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Multicultural competence in rural Australian surgical systems;Australian Journal of Rural Health;2024-07-10

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