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      Overuse of Continuous Pulse Oximetry for Bronchiolitis : The Need for Deimplementation Science

      1 , 1
      JAMA
      American Medical Association (AMA)

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          Interventions Aimed at Reducing Use of Low-Value Health Services: A Systematic Review.

          The effectiveness of different types of interventions to reduce low-value care has been insufficiently summarized to allow for translation to practice. This article systematically reviews the literature on the effectiveness of interventions to reduce low-value care and the quality of those studies. We found that multicomponent interventions addressing both patient and clinician roles in overuse have the greatest potential to reduce low-value care. Clinical decision support and performance feedback are promising strategies with a solid evidence base, and provider education yields changes by itself and when paired with other strategies. Further research is needed on the effectiveness of pay-for-performance, insurer restrictions, and risk-sharing contracts to reduce use of low-value care. While the literature reveals important evidence on strategies used to reduce low-value care, meaningful gaps persist. More experimentation, paired with rigorous evaluation and publication, is needed.
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            Trends in Bronchiolitis Hospitalizations in the United States: 2000–2016

            From 2000 to 2016, the incidence of bronchiolitis hospitalization and mortality in US children decreased, whereas mechanical ventilation use and hospital cost substantially increased. OBJECTIVES: To investigate the temporal trend in the national incidence of bronchiolitis hospitalizations, their characteristics, inpatient resource use, and hospital cost from 2000 through 2016. METHODS: We performed a serial, cross-sectional analysis of nationally representative samples (the 2000, 2003, 2006, 2009, 2012, and 2016 Kids’ Inpatient Databases) of children (age <2 years) hospitalized for bronchiolitis. We identified all children hospitalized with bronchiolitis by using International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification 466.1 and International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision, Clinical Modification J21. Complex chronic conditions were defined by the pediatric complex chronic conditions classification by using inpatient data. The primary outcomes were the incidence of bronchiolitis hospitalizations, mechanical ventilation use, and hospital direct cost. We examined the trends accounting for sampling weights. RESULTS: From 2000 to 2016, the incidence of bronchiolitis hospitalization decreased from 17.9 to 13.5 per 1000 person-years in US children (25% decrease; P trend < .001). In contrast, the proportion of bronchiolitis hospitalizations among overall hospitalizations increased from 16% to 18% ( P trend < .001). There was an increase in the proportion of children with a complex chronic condition (6%–13%; 117% increase), hospitalization to children’s hospital (15%–29%; 93% increase), and mechanical ventilation use (2%–5%; 184% increase; all P trend < .001). Likewise, the hospital cost increased from $449 million to $734 million (63% increase) nationally (with an increase in geometric mean of cost per hospitalization [from $3267 to $4086; 25% increase; P trend < .001] adjusted for inflation) from 2003 to 2016. CONCLUSIONS: From 2000 through 2016, the incidence of bronchiolitis hospitalizations among US children declined. In contrast, mechanical ventilation use and nationwide hospital direct cost substantially increased.
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              How a regional collaborative of hospitals and physicians in Michigan cut costs and improved the quality of care.

              There is evidence that collaborations between hospitals and physicians in particular regions of the country have led to improvements in the quality of care. Even so, there have not been many of these collaborations. We review one, the Michigan regional collaborative improvement program, which was paid for by a large private insurer, has yielded improvements for a range of clinical conditions, and has reduced costs in several important areas. In general and vascular surgery alone, complications from surgery dropped almost 2.6 percent among participating Michigan hospitals-a change that translates into 2,500 fewer Michigan patients with surgical complications each year. Estimated annual savings from this one collaborative are approximately $20 million, far exceeding the cost of administering the program. Regional collaborative improvement programs should become increasingly attractive to hospitals and physicians, as well as to national policy makers, as they seek to improve health care quality and reduce costs.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                JAMA
                JAMA
                American Medical Association (AMA)
                0098-7484
                April 21 2020
                April 21 2020
                : 323
                : 15
                : 1449
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Boston University School of Medicine, Boston Medical Center, Department of Pediatrics, Boston, Massachusetts
                Article
                10.1001/jama.2020.4359
                4fcacf6e-9d3c-4dcf-af02-4dad111533a1
                © 2020
                History

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