Background
Little is known about the longitudinal change in quality of acute asthma care for hospitalized children and adults in the U.S. We investigated whether the concordance of inpatient asthma care with the national guidelines improved over time, identified hospital characteristics predictive of guideline concordance, and determined whether guideline-concordant care is associated with a shorter hospital length-of-stay (LOS). Methods
Analysis of data from two multicenter chart review studies of hospitalized patients aged 2-54 years with acute asthma during two time periods: 1999-2000 and 2012-2013. Outcomes were guideline concordance at the patient- and hospital-levels, and association of patient composite concordance with hospital LOS. Results
Analytic cohort for the comparison of guideline concordance comprised 1,634 patients: 834 patients from 1999-2000 versus 800 patients from 2012-2013. Over these ∼15 years, inpatient asthma care became more concordant at the hospital-level, with the mean composite score increasing from 74 to 82 (P<.001 however during wide variability in guideline concordance of acute asthma care remained across hospitals with the greatest variation provision individualized written action plan at discharge was significantly lower midwestern and southern compared to northeastern hospitals. after adjusting for severity patients who received perfectly concordant guidelines had shorter hospital los p=".009).<div">Conclusionsfrom #Medicine via ola Kala on Inoreader http://ift.tt/1oFrrPN
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