Regionalization of Hip Fracture Care in Five High-Income Countries.
Journal
Health services research
ISSN
1475-6773
Type
text::journal::journal article
Date Issued
2025-06-24
Author(s)
Bakx, Pieter
Godoy, Carlos
Al-Azazi, Saeed
Banerjee, Amitava
Burrack, Nitzan
Fu, Christina
Hatfield, Laura A
Hartman, Asa R
Huang, Nicole
Ko, Dennis T
Lix, Lisa M
Novack, Victor
Pasea, Laura
Qiu, Feng
Quinn, Kieran L
Ravi, Bheeshma
Stukel, Therese A
Uyl-de Groot, Carin A
Landon, Bruce E
Cram, Peter
Abstract
To describe differences in regionalization of hip fracture care and the volume-outcome relationship in five countries.
We conducted a population-based cross-sectional cohort study in Canada, Israel, the Netherlands, Taiwan, and the United States. Within each country, we stratified patients into quintiles based upon the volume of hip fractures in the hospital where they were treated. We measured regionalization by the proportion of acute-care hospitals that treated patients with hip fractures and summarized the hospital volume distribution by the ratio of hip fracture volumes for high-volume hospitals versus low-volume hospitals. We then examined age- and sex-standardized outcomes and treatment for patients treated at high-volume and low-volume hospitals.
We used nationally representative administrative data on adults aged ≥ 66 years hospitalized with hip fracture from 2011 to 2019. We followed them until death or 365 days after the discharge date. Across countries, the percentage of all acute-care hospitals that treated hip fractures differed widely (from 37.0% in Canada to 82.8% in Israel), with high-volume hospitals treating 4-14 times as many hip fractures as low-volume hospitals. The absolute risk-adjusted difference in 30-day mortality for high-volume compared to low-volume hospitals ranged between (-1.9% [95% CI, -2.2 to -1.7] in Canada and +1.1% [95% CI, 0.4-1.8] in the Netherlands). The proportion of patients receiving non-operative fracture treatment was lower in high-volume hospitals than low-volume hospitals in all countries (-5.4% [95% CI, -6.5 to -4.3] in Israel to -0.1% [95% CI, -0.5 to 0.3] in the Netherlands).
Hip fracture regionalization differed substantially across countries. The direction and the magnitude of association between greater regionalization and improved patient outcomes were inconsistent across countries.
We conducted a population-based cross-sectional cohort study in Canada, Israel, the Netherlands, Taiwan, and the United States. Within each country, we stratified patients into quintiles based upon the volume of hip fractures in the hospital where they were treated. We measured regionalization by the proportion of acute-care hospitals that treated patients with hip fractures and summarized the hospital volume distribution by the ratio of hip fracture volumes for high-volume hospitals versus low-volume hospitals. We then examined age- and sex-standardized outcomes and treatment for patients treated at high-volume and low-volume hospitals.
We used nationally representative administrative data on adults aged ≥ 66 years hospitalized with hip fracture from 2011 to 2019. We followed them until death or 365 days after the discharge date. Across countries, the percentage of all acute-care hospitals that treated hip fractures differed widely (from 37.0% in Canada to 82.8% in Israel), with high-volume hospitals treating 4-14 times as many hip fractures as low-volume hospitals. The absolute risk-adjusted difference in 30-day mortality for high-volume compared to low-volume hospitals ranged between (-1.9% [95% CI, -2.2 to -1.7] in Canada and +1.1% [95% CI, 0.4-1.8] in the Netherlands). The proportion of patients receiving non-operative fracture treatment was lower in high-volume hospitals than low-volume hospitals in all countries (-5.4% [95% CI, -6.5 to -4.3] in Israel to -0.1% [95% CI, -0.5 to 0.3] in the Netherlands).
Hip fracture regionalization differed substantially across countries. The direction and the magnitude of association between greater regionalization and improved patient outcomes were inconsistent across countries.
Language
English
Keywords
hip fracture
international comparisons
regionalization