3 results on '"Shahian D"'
Search Results
2. Selection of a cardiac surgery provider in the managed care era.
- Author
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Shahian DM, Yip W, Westcott G, and Jacobson J
- Subjects
- Female, Hospital Costs, Hospital Mortality, Humans, Internship and Residency, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Male, Managed Care Programs, Massachusetts, Referral and Consultation, Travel, Cardiovascular Diseases surgery, Choice Behavior, Models, Econometric, Patient Satisfaction
- Abstract
Objective: Many health planners promote the use of competition to contain cost and improve quality of care. Using a standard econometric model, we examined the evidence for "value-based" cardiac surgery provider selection in eastern Massachusetts, where there is significant competition and managed care penetration., Methods: McFadden's conditional logit model was used to study cardiac surgery provider selection among 6952 patients and eight metropolitan Boston hospitals in 1997. Hospital predictor variables included beds, cardiac surgery case volume, objective clinical and financial performance, reputation (percent out-of-state referrals, cardiac residency program), distance from patient's home to hospital, and historical referral patterns. Subgroup analyses were performed for each major payer category., Results: Distance from patient's home to hospital (odds ratio 0.90; P =.000) and the historical referral pattern from each patient's hometown (z = 45.305; P =.000) were important predictors in all models. A cardiac surgery residency enhanced the probability of selection (odds ratio 5.25; P =.000), as did percent out-of-state referrals (odds ratio 1.10; P =.001). Higher mortality rates were associated with decreased probability of selection (odds ratio 0.51; P =.027), but higher length of stay was paradoxically associated with greater probability (odds ratio 1.72; P =.000). Total hospital costs were irrelevant (odds ratio 1.00; P =.179). When analyzed by payer subgroup, Medicare patients appeared to select hospitals with both low mortality (odds ratio 0.43; P =.176) and short length of stay (odds ratio 0.76; P =.213), although the results did not achieve statistical significance. The commercial managed care subgroup exhibited the least "value-based" behavior. The odds ratio for length of stay was the highest of any group (odds ratio = 2.589; P =.000) and there was a subset of hospitals for which higher mortality was actually associated with greater likelihood of selection., Conclusions: The observable determinants of cardiac surgery provider selection are related to hospital reputation, historical referral patterns, and patient proximity, not objective clinical or cost performance. The paradoxic behavior of commercial managed care probably results from unobserved choice factors that are not primarily based on objective provider performance.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Mediastinal goiters. The need for an aggressive approach.
- Author
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Sanders LE, Rossi RL, Shahian DM, and Williamson WA
- Subjects
- Academic Medical Centers, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Biopsy, Needle standards, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Goiter, Substernal diagnosis, Goiter, Substernal pathology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging standards, Male, Massachusetts epidemiology, Middle Aged, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Postoperative Complications etiology, Radionuclide Imaging standards, Thyroidectomy adverse effects, Tomography, X-Ray Computed standards, Treatment Outcome, Goiter, Substernal surgery, Thyroidectomy standards
- Abstract
We reviewed the cases of 52 patients with substernal goiters to examine clinical presentation, workup, technique of removal, malignancy, and outcome. Half of the patients were asymptomatic; half had at least one compressive symptom. Chest film was the most used; computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging was by far the most useful study. Thyroid scans often failed to show the intrathoracic goiter. Fine-needle aspiration was not helpful because of the gland's inaccessibility. Seventeen percent (nine) of the thyroids showed malignancy, 21% (11) including incidental papillary carcinomas. These were not identified by duration of goiter, symptoms, or fine-needle aspiration. Except for lymphomas, prognosis was good after resection. Removal was almost always accomplished via cervical incision, with low morbidity and no deaths. The threat of compression, the substantial chance of malignancy, and the safety of resection mean that the presence of substernal goiter is an indication for surgery.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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