Assessment of HF Outcomes Using a Claims-Based Frailty Index
This study used a claims-based frailty index to investigate outcomes of frail patients with heart failure (HF). Medicare value-based payment programs financially reward and penalize hospitals based on HF patients’ outcomes. Although programs adjust risks for comorbidities, they do not adjust for fra...
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Veröffentlicht in: | JACC. Heart failure 2020-06, Vol.8 (6), p.481-488 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | This study used a claims-based frailty index to investigate outcomes of frail patients with heart failure (HF).
Medicare value-based payment programs financially reward and penalize hospitals based on HF patients’ outcomes. Although programs adjust risks for comorbidities, they do not adjust for frailty. Hospitals caring for high proportions of frail patients may be unfairly penalized. Understanding frail HF patients’ outcomes may allow improved risk adjustment and more equitable assessment of health care systems.
Adapting a claims-based frailty index, the study assigned a frailty score to each adult in the National in-patient Sample (NIS) from 2012 through September 2015 with a primary diagnosis of HF and dichotomized frailty by using a cutoff value established in the general NIS population. Multivariate regression models were estimated, controlling for comorbidities and hospital characteristics, to investigate relationships between frailty and outcomes.
Of 732,932 patients, 369,298 were frail. Frail patients were more likely than nonfrail patients to die during hospital stay (3.57% vs. 2.37%, respectively; adjusted odds ratio [aOR]: 1.67; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.61 to 1.72; p |
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ISSN: | 2213-1779 2213-1787 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jchf.2019.12.012 |