Abstract
Previous studies suggest surgical quality outcomes are similar between rural and urban hospitals, but data about gynecology in rural hospitals is sparse. This was a retrospective cohort study utilizing the National Inpatient Sample database from the Agency of Healthcare Research and Quality. Patients who underwent benign hysterectomy for non-prolapse indications between 2012-2016 were identified using ICD-9 and 10 codes. Patients were stratified into rural or urban non-teaching groups; urban teaching hospitals were the referent group. The primary outcome was the rate of patient safety indicator (PSI) events. PSI events were identified using ICD-9 and 10 codes. Statistical analysis was performed using analysis of variance and uni- and multivariate Poisson regressions. 154,810 patients met all inclusion criteria. The cumulative rate of PSI events was 11.9% at rural hospitals, 13.9% at urban non-teaching hospitals and 16.9% at urban teaching hospitals, P<0.001. The most common PSI events were postoperative metabolic derangement, hemorrhage, and accidental puncture. The rate of transfusion was highest in urban teaching hospitals (6.7%) and similar for rural (5.1%) and urban non-teaching hospitals (5.5%), P<0.001. The rate of genitourinary tract injury was between 1.4-1.6%, and similar across sites, P=0.89. After adjusting for confounders, the risk of PSI events was similar across locations. The risk of transfusion was lower at rural hospitals (aRR=0.84, 95% CI: 0.74-0.94). Hysterectomy performed at rural hospitals, typically thought of as having low surgical volume compared to urban hospitals, is associated with similar risk of PSI events and lower risk of transfusion.
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