No “July Effect” in the management and outcomes of acute myocardial infarction: An 18‐year United States national study

Author:

Patlolla Sri Harsha1,Truesdell Alexander G.2,Basir Mir B.3ORCID,Rab Syed T.4ORCID,Singh Mandeep5ORCID,Belford Peter Matthew6,Zhao David X.6ORCID,Vallabhajosyula Saraschandra67ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Staten Island University Hospital Northwell Health Staten Island New York USA

2. Virginia Heart/Inova Heart and Vascular Institute Falls Church Virginia USA

3. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine Henry Ford Hospital and Health System Detroit Michigan USA

4. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta Georgia USA

5. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA

6. Department of Medicine, Section of Cardiovascular Medicine Wake Forest University School of Medicine Winston‐Salem North Carolina USA

7. Department of Implementation Science, Section of Public Health Sciences Wake Forest University School of Medicine Winston‐Salem North Carolina USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThere has been conflicting reports on the effect of new trainees on clinical outcomes at teaching hospitals in the first training month (July in the United States of America). We sought to assess this “July effect” in a contemporary acute myocardial infarction (AMI) population.MethodsAdult (>18 years) AMI hospitalizations in May and July in urban teaching and urban nonteaching hospitals in the United States were identified from the HCUP‐NIS database (2000–2017). In‐hospital mortality was compared between May and July admissions. A difference‐in‐difference analysis comparing a change in outcome from May to July in teaching hospitals to a change in outcome from May to July in nonteaching hospitals was also performed.ResultsA total of 1,312,006 AMI hospitalizations from urban teaching (n = 710,593; 54.2%) or nonteaching (n = 601,413; 45.8%) hospitals in the months of May and July were evaluated. May admissions in teaching hospitals, had greater comorbidity, higher rates of acute multiorgan failure (10.6% vs. 10.2%, p < 0.001) and lower rates of cardiac arrest when compared to July admissions. July AMI admissions had lower in‐hospital mortality compared to May (5.6% vs. 5.8%; adjusted odds ratio 0.94 [95% confidence interval 0.92–0.97]; p < 0.001) in teaching hospitals. Using the difference‐in‐difference model, there was no evidence of a July effect for in‐hospital mortality (p = 0.19).ConclusionsThere was no July effect for in‐hospital mortality in this contemporary AMI population.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine

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