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Rising United States Hospital Admissions for Acute Bacterial Skin and Skin Structure Infections: Recent Trends and Economic Impact
by
Patel, Dipen A.
, Stephens, Jennifer M.
, Khachatryan, Alexandra
, Johnson, Kenneth
, Kaye, Keith S.
, Patel, Ayush
in
Acute Disease
/ Adolescent
/ Adult
/ Aged
/ Aged, 80 and over
/ Analysis
/ Antibiotics
/ Bivariate analysis
/ Confidence intervals
/ Cost analysis
/ Costs
/ Cross infection
/ Cross-Sectional Studies
/ Departments
/ Diagnosis
/ Diagnosis related groups
/ DRGs
/ Economic aspects
/ Economic impact
/ Female
/ Health care
/ Health Care Costs
/ Health care expenditures
/ Health care policy
/ Health Resources
/ Hospital admission and discharge
/ Hospitalization
/ Hospitalization - economics
/ Hospitalization - trends
/ Humans
/ Impact analysis
/ Infections
/ Infectious diseases
/ Length of Stay
/ Male
/ Medical care utilization
/ Middle Aged
/ Mortality
/ Outcome Assessment (Health Care)
/ Patient Admission
/ Patient admissions
/ Patients
/ Resource utilization
/ Retrospective Studies
/ Risk Factors
/ Skin
/ Skin Diseases, Bacterial - epidemiology
/ Staphylococcus aureus
/ Staphylococcus infections
/ Trends
/ United States - epidemiology
/ Young Adult
2015
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Rising United States Hospital Admissions for Acute Bacterial Skin and Skin Structure Infections: Recent Trends and Economic Impact
by
Patel, Dipen A.
, Stephens, Jennifer M.
, Khachatryan, Alexandra
, Johnson, Kenneth
, Kaye, Keith S.
, Patel, Ayush
in
Acute Disease
/ Adolescent
/ Adult
/ Aged
/ Aged, 80 and over
/ Analysis
/ Antibiotics
/ Bivariate analysis
/ Confidence intervals
/ Cost analysis
/ Costs
/ Cross infection
/ Cross-Sectional Studies
/ Departments
/ Diagnosis
/ Diagnosis related groups
/ DRGs
/ Economic aspects
/ Economic impact
/ Female
/ Health care
/ Health Care Costs
/ Health care expenditures
/ Health care policy
/ Health Resources
/ Hospital admission and discharge
/ Hospitalization
/ Hospitalization - economics
/ Hospitalization - trends
/ Humans
/ Impact analysis
/ Infections
/ Infectious diseases
/ Length of Stay
/ Male
/ Medical care utilization
/ Middle Aged
/ Mortality
/ Outcome Assessment (Health Care)
/ Patient Admission
/ Patient admissions
/ Patients
/ Resource utilization
/ Retrospective Studies
/ Risk Factors
/ Skin
/ Skin Diseases, Bacterial - epidemiology
/ Staphylococcus aureus
/ Staphylococcus infections
/ Trends
/ United States - epidemiology
/ Young Adult
2015
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Rising United States Hospital Admissions for Acute Bacterial Skin and Skin Structure Infections: Recent Trends and Economic Impact
by
Patel, Dipen A.
, Stephens, Jennifer M.
, Khachatryan, Alexandra
, Johnson, Kenneth
, Kaye, Keith S.
, Patel, Ayush
in
Acute Disease
/ Adolescent
/ Adult
/ Aged
/ Aged, 80 and over
/ Analysis
/ Antibiotics
/ Bivariate analysis
/ Confidence intervals
/ Cost analysis
/ Costs
/ Cross infection
/ Cross-Sectional Studies
/ Departments
/ Diagnosis
/ Diagnosis related groups
/ DRGs
/ Economic aspects
/ Economic impact
/ Female
/ Health care
/ Health Care Costs
/ Health care expenditures
/ Health care policy
/ Health Resources
/ Hospital admission and discharge
/ Hospitalization
/ Hospitalization - economics
/ Hospitalization - trends
/ Humans
/ Impact analysis
/ Infections
/ Infectious diseases
/ Length of Stay
/ Male
/ Medical care utilization
/ Middle Aged
/ Mortality
/ Outcome Assessment (Health Care)
/ Patient Admission
/ Patient admissions
/ Patients
/ Resource utilization
/ Retrospective Studies
/ Risk Factors
/ Skin
/ Skin Diseases, Bacterial - epidemiology
/ Staphylococcus aureus
/ Staphylococcus infections
/ Trends
/ United States - epidemiology
/ Young Adult
2015
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Rising United States Hospital Admissions for Acute Bacterial Skin and Skin Structure Infections: Recent Trends and Economic Impact
Journal Article
Rising United States Hospital Admissions for Acute Bacterial Skin and Skin Structure Infections: Recent Trends and Economic Impact
2015
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Overview
The number of ambulatory patients seeking treatment for skin and skin structure infections (SSSI) are increasing. The objective of this study is to determine recent trends in hospital admissions and healthcare resource utilization and identify covariates associated with hospital costs and mortality for hospitalized adult patients with a primary SSSI diagnosis in the United States.
We performed a retrospective cross-sectional analysis (years 2005-2011) of data from the US Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project National Inpatient Sample. Recent trends, patient characteristics, and healthcare resource utilization for patients hospitalized with a primary SSSI diagnosis were evaluated. Descriptive and bivariate analyses were conducted to assess patient and hospital characteristics.
A total of 1.8% of hospital admissions for the years 2005 through 2011 were for adult patients with a SSSI primary diagnosis. SSSI-related hospital admissions significantly changed during the study period (P < .001 for trend) ranging from 1.6% (in 2005) to 2.0% (in 2011). Mean hospital length of stay (LOS) decreased from 5.4 days in the year 2005 to 5.0 days in the year 2011 (overall change, P < .001) with no change in hospital costs. Patients with postoperative wound infections had the longest hospital stays (adjusted mean, 5.81 days; 95% confidence interval (CI), 5.80-5.83) and highest total costs (adjusted mean, $9388; 95% CI, $9366-$9410). Year of hospital admission was strongly associated with mortality; infection type, all patient refined diagnosis related group severity of illness level, and LOS were strongly associated with hospital costs.
Hospital admissions for adult patients in the United States with a SSSI primary diagnosis continue to increase. Decreasing hospital inpatient LOS and mortality rate may be due to improved early treatment. Future research should focus on identifying alternative treatment processes for patients with SSSI that could shift management from inpatient to outpatient treatment settings.
Publisher
Public Library of Science,Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Subject
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