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HSCRC Estimate of the Marginal Additional Charge ofPPCs in Maryland for Rate Year 2014Objective: Estimate the marginal hospital charge increase when a patient develops a PPC during a hospital stay (i.e., acquired post admission) in Maryland. Data Source: Maryland inpatient acute care all payer statewide hospital data from April 2011 through March 2012 containing 711,336 discharges were used as the basis for the estimates. Discharges that died or were transferred to another acute care facility were excluded. Discharges from two inpatient rehab hospitals were excluded. Further, discharges with charge values below $200 or above $2,000,000 were excluded. The resultant analysis file contained 684,363 discharges.Individual case level charges were standardized based the ratio of the statewide average charge to hospital average charge. The steps to standardize the charges as follows:1.Calculate the mean statewide charge by DRG, Ci for DRG i.2.Calculate the mean hospital charge Hj for hospital j. 3.Calculate the mean charge the hospital would have if each discharge had the statewide mean charge for the admission DRG assigned to the discharge, Sj.4.The standardizing factor to apply to the hospital charges is then Sj/Hj. Since the charge values in the regression file used standardized charges, the additional per case charge value for each PPC needs to be converted back to a hospital specific value for hospital rankings. Method: Since the marginal charge impact of a PPC, will vary depending on a patient’s reason for admission and severity of illness at the time of admission, it was necessary to adjust for these factors in order to determine the marginal charges of a PPC. 3M All Patient Refined Diagnosis Related Groups (APR-DRGs) classify discharges to one of 314 reasons for admission and one of four severity of illness levels (1,256 unique patient categories). Each discharge in the analysis database was assigned to an APR DRG v29.0. Since patients who develop a post admission complication often develop multiple associated complications, it was necessary to adjust for the presence of multiple complications in order to determine the marginal charge of an individual PPC. 3M Potentially Preventable Complications (PPCs) v29 identify 66 different types of post admission complications analyzing 1,450 ICD-9-CM diagnosis codes and a select set of procedure codes. All PPCs present on each discharge (potentially preventable or not) were identified and used in the regression analysis. A simple linear regression was specified of the form:Charge i = α + β j PPC j,i + γ k APR-DRG k,i + ε iWhere:Charge i is the total charge standardized for discharge iAPR DRG k,i is a binary variable (0,1) indicating which of the 1,256 APR DRGs was assigned to the ith dischargePPC j,i is a binary variable (0,1) indicating which of the j PPCs were present for the ith dischargeα is a constant value applied to each discharge in the model. α is the average baseline charge for a reference APR DRG. γ k is the coefficient associated with APR-DRG k and measures the marginal additional charge above α that is due to the patient’s reason for admission and severity of illness level at the time of admission.β j is the coefficient associated with PPC j and measures the marginal additional charge above α that is due to the presence of PPC jε i is the residual error of the model for discharge iThe coefficient β j for each PPC is a measure of the marginal additional charges due to the occurrence of the PPC taking into account the patient’s reason for admission, severity of illness and the presence of any other post admission complications (PPCs). Cases in low volume APR-DRGs were omitted from the regression (less than 20 cases in each APR-DRG SOI combination). No effort was made to identify and exclude outlier cases.Results: Table 1 below provides coefficients (additional per case charges) and t-values for each of the PPC categories based on the regression model calculated. The results of the regression are used for computing the dollar impact for each of the 66 PPCs. The dollar impact is used to create an index of either additional, or averted, resource use based on a hospital’s rate of a PPC summed across all PPCs. Thirteen (13) PPCs with less predictive t-values (under 1.96) or with coding or clinical issues were excluded from the quality based payment adjustment PPC policy in FY2011. Two additional PPCs (PPC 29 and 45) are added this year as their predicted additional resource is negative and not statistically significant. Table 1. PPC Charge Regression Estimates??Rate Year 2014 (Based on FY2011Q4, FY2012 Q123 Data)% Change from Previous Base Period#PPC DescriptionMarginal Charges (β j)T-ValueCases (N)NotesMarginal Charges (β j)Cases1Stroke & Intracranial Hemorrhage $14,59739.45954?-2.9%-8.2%2Extreme CNS Complications$14,96727.17445?14.1%-8.4%3Acute Pulmonary Edema and Respiratory Failure without Ventilation $9,25655.665,044?3.8%-10.9%4Acute Pulmonary Edema and Respiratory Failure with Ventilation $32,14381.14839?16.7%-9.6%5Pneumonia & Other Lung Infections$19,788100.633,521?23.2%-7.6%6Aspiration Pneumonia $15,66153.491,515?29.9%-2.7%7Pulmonary Embolism$15,85534.97615?22.7%-7.0%8Other Pulmonary Complications$10,53655.093,716?-3.0%-5.8%9Shock$18,12662.51,635?14.2%-5.5%10Congestive Heart Failure $6,51421.461,413?-5.3%-21.2%11Acute Myocardial Infarction $8,25623.871,080?31.6%-8.5%12Cardiac Arrythmias & Conduction Disturbances$3,6178.751,000?14.4%-9.0%13Other Cardiac Complications$4,5256.65272?192.3%8.8%14Ventricular Fibrillation/Cardiac Arrest$19,09345.84760?5.3%0.0%15Peripheral Vascular Complications Except Venous Thrombosis $12,66717.09235?-26.0%1.3%16Venous Thrombosis$17,30156.771,419?-2.8%-4.0%17Major Gastrointestinal Complications without Transfusion or Significant Bleeding$16,04438.42733?7.7%-7.2%18Major Gastrointestinal Complications with Transfusion or Significant Bleeding $19,80729.06273?15.2%-5.5%19Major Liver Complications$22,22538.04384?58.7%-8.8%20Other Gastrointestinal Complications without Transfusion or Significant Bleeding $15,63627.93406?20.6%-3.3%21Clostridium Difficile Colitis$17,16459.391,544Clinical/Coding 8.9%5.4%22Urinary Tract Infection$0.0Divided into PPC65 and 66??23GU Complications Except UTI $9,18416.87427?18.2%-1.6%24Renal Failure without Dialysis $8,30461.547,416?12.4%-7.3%25Renal Failure with Dialysis $48,22659.12194?17.5%-11.0%26Diabetic Ketoacidosis & Coma $8,8115.6952?101.2%0.0%27Post-Hemorrhagic & Other Acute Anemia with Transfusion $6,75219.841,105?-2.8%-2.6%28In-Hospital Trauma and Fractures $5,5355.88144?-14.2%9.1%29Poisonings Except from Anesthesia -$1,413-1.42128Excluded this year-169.6%-25.1%30Poisonings due to Anesthesia $16,1612.032t-value -729.0%-50.0%31Decubitus Ulcer $45,52859.89222?33.4%-23.7%32Transfusion Incompatibility Reaction$21,4621.921t-value ??33Cellulitis $8,35022.41941?40.3%-6.1%34Moderate Infectious$22,05649.95681?32.2%-15.3%35Septicemia & Severe Infections$21,76683.692,046?2.7%-12.6%36Acute Mental Health Changes $3,5728.25669?17.7%-5.5%37Post-Operative Infection & Deep Wound Disruption Without Procedure $18,62949.98973?36.3%-2.1%38Post-Operative Wound Infection & Deep Wound Disruption with Procedure $33,08924.8172?20.1%22.0%39Reopening Surgical Site $18,17621.65183?-16.2%7.6%40Post-Operative Hemorrhage & Hematoma without Hemorrhage Control Procedure or I&D Proc$8,85138.022,406?19.9%-8.6%41Post-Operative Hemorrhage & Hematoma with Hemorrhage Control Procedure or I&D Proc$12,17315.05196?-3.0%-8.8%42Accidental Puncture/Laceration During Invasive Procedure $6,40918.971,138?22.1%-13.5%43Accidental Cut or Hemorrhage During Other Medical Care $3,2302.1257t-value 86.4%-9.5%44Other Surgical Complication - Mod $11,56317.56303?18.6%-10.6%45Post-procedure Foreign Bodies -$1,416-0.6126Excluded this year-110.4%-21.2%46Post-Operative Substance Reaction & Non-O.R. Procedure for Foreign Body -$4,104-0.53t-value -42.4%0.0%47Encephalopathy $11,62837.161,324?-11.1%-11.4%48Other Complications of Medical Care $18,62445.1758?9.4%-4.1%49Iatrogenic Pneumothrax $9,65224.67870?43.5%-4.2%50Mechanical Complication of Device, Implant & Graft $17,08735.46547?22.1%4.4%51Gastrointestinal Ostomy Complications $24,77337.77294?33.9%-10.4%52Inflammation & Other Complications of Devices, Implants or Grafts Except Vascular Infection $12,22934.351,036?-0.6%-1.2%53Infection, Inflammation & Clotting Complications of Peripheral Vascular Catheters & Infusions$13,28318.69250?106.3%-11.7%54Infections due to Central Venous Catheters $34,97551.77291?20.1%-11.6%55Obstetrical Hemorrhage without Transfusion $3702.154,567Clinical/Coding 19.4%-18.8%56Obstetrical Hemorrhage wtih Transfusion $3,7648.05602?43.8%13.2%57Obstetric Lacerations & Other Trauma Without Instrumentation $3401.031,185t-value 33.7%-2.7%58Obstetric Lacerations & Other Trauma With Instrumentation$6781.26435t-value -8.1%-1.4%59Medical & Anesthesia Obstetric Complications $1,2092.90744?60.9%-11.0%60Major Puerperal Infection and Other Major Obstetric Complications -$591-0.58125t-value -136.7%15.7%61Other Complications of Obstetrical Surgical & Perineal Wounds $1,4661.80192t-value -754.1%1.6%62Delivery with Placental Complications $1,0991.63278t-value -11.5%15.4%63Post-Operative Respiratory Failure with Tracheostomy $124,78676.7948Clinical/Coding -3.2%-21.3%64Other In-Hospital Adverse Events$4,2858.77526Clinical/Coding -18.7%-18.2%65Urinary Tract Infection without Catheter $14,54980.634,025?37.0%-13.1%66Catheter-Related Urinary Tract Infection$15,54712.8385?-8.2%-4.5%Note: Shaded PPCs are excluded?? ................
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