Author:
Chrusciel Jan,Le Guillou Adrien,Daoud Eric,Laplanche David,Steunou Sandra,Clément Marie-Caroline,Sanchez Stéphane
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Hospitals in the public and private sectors tend to join larger organizations to form hospital groups. This increasingly frequent mode of functioning raises the question of how countries should organize their health system, according to the interactions already present between their hospitals. The objective of this study was to identify distinctive profiles of French hospitals according to their characteristics and their role in the French hospital network.
Methods
Data were extracted from the national hospital database for year 2016. The database was restricted to public hospitals that practiced medicine, surgery or obstetrics. Hospitals profiles were determined using the k-means method. The variables entered in the clustering algorithm were: the number of stays, the effective diversity of hospital activity, and a network-based mobility indicator (proportion of stays followed by another stay in a different hospital of the same Regional Hospital Group within 90 days).
Results
Three hospital groups were identified by the clustering algorithm. The first group was constituted of 34 large hospitals (median 82,100 annual stays, interquartile range 69,004 – 117,774) with a very diverse activity. The second group contained medium-sized hospitals (with a median of 258 beds, interquartile range 164 - 377). The third group featured less diversity regarding the type of stay (with a mean of 8 effective activity domains, standard deviation 2.73), a smaller size and a higher proportion of patients that subsequently visited other hospitals (11%). The most frequent type of patient mobility occurred from the hospitals in group 2 to the hospitals in group 1 (29%). The reverse direction was less frequent (19%).
Conclusions
The French hospital network is organized around three categories of public hospitals, with an unbalanced and disassortative patient flow. This type of organization has implications for hospital planning and infectious diseases control.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference64 articles.
1. De Regge M, De Pourcq K, Van de Voorde C, Van den Heede K, Gemmel P, Eeckloo K. The introduction of hospital networks in Belgium: the path from policy statements to the 2019 legislation. Health Policy. 2019;123:601–5.
2. Goldsmith JC. The illusive logic of integration. Healthc Forum J. 1994;37:26–31.
3. De Pourcq K, De Regge M, Van den Heede K, Van de Voorde C, Paul G, Eeckloo K. The role of governance in different types of interhospital collaborations: a systematic review. Health Policy. 2019;123:472–9.
4. Enthoven AC. Integrated delivery systems: the cure for fragmentation. Am J Manag Care. 2009;15(10 Suppl):S284–90.
5. Pourat N, Davis AC, Salce E, Hilberman D, Roby DH, Kominski GF. In ten California counties, notable progress in system integration within the safety net, although challenges remain. Health Aff (Millwood). 2012;31:1717–27.
Cited by
3 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