Abstract
ObjectivesThe rate of outpatient therapeutic curettage is lower in Germany than in other countries, although there are no differences in patient safety between outpatient and inpatient management. In this context, outpatient surgery is economically advantageous and efficient. This study aims to identify organisational and regional factors that determine the rate of outpatient curettage in German hospitals.MethodsWe analysed the hospital quality reports for 2013–2019, which include data from all German hospitals with gynaecology departments (n=709). These organisational data (teaching status, size, ownership, department type and hospital group) are enhanced by contextual data (degree of urbanisation, market concentration and population income). We calculated a zero-one inflated beta regression model to identify factors that influence the rate of outpatient curettages in 2019.ResultsIncreasing numbers of curettages are provided on an outpatient basis; accordingly, the number of inpatient curettages declined during the analysis period. In 2019, 69.6% of in-hospital curettages were performed as outpatient surgery. Hospital size is significantly negative and outpatient physician department type is significantly positively associated with outpatient curettage rates. We found no effects of hospital ownership type, degree of urbanisation or market concentration. A high income in the surgical district’s population is also associated with a higher rate of outpatient curettages.ConclusionsThe analyses demonstrate that organisational factors are associated with the outpatient curettage rate. This indicates that external elements, such as reimbursements and regulations, influence outpatient surgical events in Germany, and current regulations do not incentivise hospitals to significantly increase their rate of outpatient curettages.
Reference44 articles.
1. Mercer KR . Outpatient surgery. In: Kaye AD , Urman RD , Vadivelu N , eds. Essentials of regional anesthesia. Cham, Switzerland: Springer, 2018: 473–9. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-74838-2
2. Safety and efficiency in a Canadian outpatient gynaecological surgical centre;Lee;J Obstet Gynaecol Can,2018
3. Miscarriage treatment-related morbidities and adverse events in hospitals, ambulatory surgery centers, and office-based settings;Roberts;J Patient Saf,2020
4. Friedrich J , Tillmans H . Ambulante Operationen Im Krankenhaus. In: Klauber J , Geraedts M , Friedrich J , et al , eds. Krankenhaus Report 2016. Ambulant im Krankenhaus. Stuttgart: Schattauer, 2016: 127–47.
5. Gogna S , Latifi R . Ambulatory surgery services: changing the paradigm of surgical practice. In: Latifi R , ed. The Modern Hospital: Patients Centered, Disease Based, Research Oriented, Technology Driven. 1st edn. Cham: Springer, 2019: 257–62. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-01394-3