1. Readmission in elective spine surgery: Will short stays be beneficial to patients
- Author
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Sara Naessig, Michael C. Gerling, Frank A. Segreto, Haddy Alas, Peter G. Passias, Daniel J. Kaplan, Muhammad B. Janjua, Alekos A. Theologis, Bassel G. Diebo, Hesham Saleh, Avery E. Brown, Jonathan D. Haskel, Katherine E. Pierce, Rivka C. Ihejirika, Cole Bortz, Irene Chern, Waleed Ahmad, Dennis Vasquez-Montes, Virginie Lafage, and Carl B. Paulino
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Logistic regression ,Patient Readmission ,Neurosurgical Procedures ,Odds ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Spine surgery ,Postoperative Complications ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Hospital readmission ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Length of Stay ,Middle Aged ,Spine ,Surgery ,Neurology ,Elective Surgical Procedures ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,population characteristics ,Female ,Spinal Diseases ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Hospital stay ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
There has been limited discussion as to whether spine surgery patients are benefiting from shorter in-patient hospital stays or if they are incurring higher rates of readmission and complications secondary to shortened length of stays. Included in this study were 237,446 spine patients >18yrs and excluding infection. Patients with Clavien Grade 5 complications in 2015 had the lowest mean time to readmission after initial surgery in all years at 12.44 ± 9.03 days. Pearson bivariate correlations between LOS ≤ 1 day and decreasing days to readmission was the strongest in 2016.). Logistic regression analysis found that LOS ≤ 1 day showed an overall increase in the odds of hospital readmission from 2012 to 2016 (2.29 [2.00–2.63], 2.33 [2.08–2.61], 2.35 [2.11–2.61], 2.27 [2.06–2.49], 2.33 [2.14–2.54], all p
- Published
- 2019