Quality, outcome, and cost of care provided to very low birth weight infants in California.

Authors: 
W. Lapcharoensap; M. Bennett; X. Xu; H.C. Lee; J. Profit; D. Dukhovny
Abstract: 

OBJECTIVE: To examine association of costs with quality of care and patient outcome across hospitals in California.

METHODS: Retrospective study of very low birth weight (VLBW) births from 2014-2018 linking birth certificate, hospital discharge records and clinical data. Quality was measured using the Baby-MONITOR score. Clinical outcome was measured using survival without major morbidity (SWMM). Hierarchical generalized linear models, adjusting for clinical factors, were used to estimate risk-adjusted measures of costs, quality, and outcome for each hospital. Association between these measures was evaluated using Pearson correlation coefficient.

RESULTS: In total, 15,415 infants from 104 NICUs were included. Risk-adjusted Baby-MONITOR score, SWMM rate, and costs varied substantially. There was no correlation between risk-adjusted cost and Baby-MONITOR score (r = 0, p = 0.998). Correlation between risk-adjusted cost and SWMM rate was inverse and not significant (r = -0.07, p = 0.48).

CONCLUSIONS: With the metrics used, we found no correlation between cost, quality, and outcomes in the care of VLBW infants.

Citation: 

Lapcharoensap W, Bennett M, Xu X, Lee HC, Profit J, Dukhovny D. "Quality, outcome, and cost of care provided to very low birth weight infants in California." J Perinatol. 2024;44(2):224-230.PubMed

Publication type: 
Journal Article
Year: 
2024
CPQCC publication: 
Yes
PubMed ID: 
37805592
PMCID: 
1752207