Author:
Auger Katherine A,Shah Samir S,Huang Bin,Brady Patrick W,Weinberg Steven H,Reamer Elyse,Tanager Kevin S,Zahn Katelin,Davis Matthew M
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While medical complexity is associated
with pediatric readmission risk, less is known about how
increases in medical complexity during hospitalization
affect readmission risk.
METHODS: We conducted a five-year retrospective,
case-control study of pediatric hospitalizations at a tertiary
care children’s hospital. Cases with a 30-day unplanned
readmission were matched to controls based on admission
seasonality and distance from the hospital. Complexity
variables included the number of medications prescribed
at discharge, medical technology, and the need for home
healthcare services. Change in medical complexity variables
included new complex chronic conditions and new medical
technology. We estimated odds of 30-day unplanned
readmission using adjusted conditional logistic regression.
RESULTS: Of 41,422 eligible index hospitalizations,
we included 595 case and 595 control hospitalizations.
Complexity: Polypharmacy after discharge was
common. In adjusted analyses, being discharged with
≥2 medications was associated with higher odds of
readmission compared with being discharged without
medication; children with ≥5 discharge medications had
a greater than four-fold higher odds of readmission.
Children assisted by technology had higher odds of
readmission compared with children without technology
assistance. Change in complexity: New diagnosis of a
complex chronic condition (Adjusted Odds Ratio (AOR)
= 1.75; 1.11-2.75) and new technology (AOR = 1.84;
1.09-3.10) were associated with higher risk of readmission
when adjusting for patient characteristics. However,
these associations were not statistically significant when
adjusting for length of stay.
CONCLUSION: Polypharmacy and use of technology at
discharge pose a substantial readmission risk for children.
However, added technology and new complex chronic
conditions do not increase risk when accounting for length
of stay
Funder
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
Subject
Assessment and Diagnosis,Care Planning,Health Policy,Fundamentals and skills,General Medicine,Leadership and Management
Cited by
13 articles.
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