Regional variation of lower limb major amputations on different geographic scales – a Hungarian nationwide study over 13 years

Author:

Kolossváry Endre1ORCID,Ferenci Tamás2,Kováts Tamás3,Kovács Levente2,Farkas Katalin1,Járai Zoltán4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Angiology, St. Imre University Teaching Hospital, Budapest, Hungary

2. Physiological Controls Research Center, Óbuda University, Budapest, Hungary

3. Directorate General of IT and Health System Analysis, National Healthcare Service Center (ÁEEK), Budapest, Hungary

4. Department of Cardiology, St. Imre University Teaching Hospital, Budapest, Hungary

Abstract

Summary: Background: The incidence of lower limb major amputations is an important healthcare quality indicator, as it reflects all efforts aimed to prevent limb loss. Analysis of within-country regional variations in incidence may reveal the sources of disparities in care. Materials and methods: Based on the data of the Hungarian healthcare beneficiary population from 2004 to 2016, the incidence of lower limb major amputations and its spatial variations was determined regionally on four levels of geographic resolution. Variability and autocorrelation were quantified on different resolutions. Results: A total of 56,468 lower limb major amputation procedures were identified in 49,528 patients over the observation period. Marked regional variations were detected at all geographic scale levels. In the case of county-level and local administrative level, the systematic component of variation was 0.03 and 0.09, respectively. Only half of the variation at local administrative level was explained by county. Conclusions: Lower limb major amputations show marked regional variations on the different geographic levels of resolution. The more granular the assessment, the higher the regional variation was. Assumingly, this observation is partially a mathematical necessity but may also be related to the different characteristics of care at a given level of spatial aggregation. The decomposition of the variance of amputation rates indicates that the potential explanatory factors contributing to spatial variability are multiple and may be interpreted on different levels of geographic resolution. Addressing the unwarranted variations and resolving the issues that contribute to high lower limb major amputation rates needs further explorative analysis.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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