Affiliation:
1. The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, TX
2. Wingate University, Wingate, NC
3. The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX
Abstract
Academic hospitals contribute to health care through patient care, research, and teaching; however, their outcomes may not be equivalent to nonacademic hospitals. Multivariate analysis of variance is used to compare publicly reported data on patient satisfaction, readmission rates, mortality rates, and hospital-acquired injury scores between 1906 academic and nonacademic hospitals, while controlling for hospital-level covariates. Results show that academic hospitals have higher levels of patient satisfaction on 7 of the 11 measures and are equivalent to nonacademic hospitals on the remaining 4 measures. Academic hospitals have lower pneumonia mortality rates than nonacademic hospitals, with no difference for other mortality or disease-specific readmissions. However, academic hospitals have a slightly higher overall readmission rate. Infection rates were equivalent between academic and nonacademic hospitals for central line-associated bloodstream infections, pressure ulcers, and wound dehiscence for abdominal and pelvic injuries, but academic hospitals have higher catheter-associated urinary tract infection rates.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
15 articles.
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