Abstract

The increased focus on addressing severe maternal morbidity and maternal mortality has led to studies investigating patient and hospital characteristics associated with longer hospital stays. Length of stay (LOS) for delivery hospitalizations has a strongly skewed distribution with the vast majority of LOS lasting two to three days in the United States. Prior studies typically focused on common LOSs and dealt with the long LOS distribution tail in ways to fit conventional statistical analyses (e.g., log transformation, trimming). This study demonstrates the use of Gamma mixture models to analyze the skewed LOS distribution. Gamma mixture models are flexible and, do not require data transformation or removal of outliers to accommodate many outcome distribution shapes, these models allow for the analysis of patients staying in the hospital for a longer time, which often includes those women experiencing worse outcomes. Random effects are included in the model to account for patients being treated within the same hospitals. Further, the role and influence of differing placements of covariates on the results is discussed in the context of distinct model specifications of the Gamma mixture regression model. The application of these models shows that they are robust to the placement of covariates and random effects. Using New York State data, the models showed that longer LOS for childbirth hospitalizations were more common in hospitals designated to accept more complicated deliveries, across hospital types, and among Black women. Primary insurance also was associated with LOS. Substantial variation between hospitals suggests the need to investigate protocols to standardize evidence-based medical care.

Highlights

  • The United States (US) spends more per person on health care than any other nation, yet still performs poorly on key population health measures [1]

  • The aim of this paper is to explore the role of covariates in finite mixture regression model specifications and their impact on the resulting components

  • The odds of belonging to component B for Black, non-Hispanic women are 1.98 times the odds for White, non-Hispanic women adjusted for all other covariates

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Summary

Introduction

The United States (US) spends more per person on health care than any other nation, yet still performs poorly on key population health measures [1]. Forty-six countries, including all of Western Europe, Canada, Australia, and Japan have substantially lower maternal mortality rates than the US (3–9 versus 14 deaths per 100,000 deliveries, respectively) [2].

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