OBJECTIVES:: For certain major operations, inpatient mortality risk is lower in high-volume hospitals than those in low-volume hospitals. Extending the analysis to a broader range of interventions and outcomes is necessary before adopting policies based on minimum volume thresholds. METHODS:: Using the United States 2004 Nationwide Inpatient Sample, we assessed the effect of intervention-specific and overall hospital volume on surgical complications, potentially avoidable reoperations, and deaths across 1.4 million interventions in 353 hospitals. Outcome variations across hospitals were analyzed through a 3-level hierarchical logistic regression model (patients, surgical interventions, and hospitals), which took into account interventions o...
The association between the quantity of care that a physician or hospital provides and the quality o...
Abstract Background We sought to estimate the numbers of patients affected and deaths avoided by ado...
Background: Understanding the impact of hospital and surgeon volume on emergency intra-abdominal sur...
International audienceAbstract Background The “practice makes perfect” concept considers the more fr...
Objectives Emergency abdominal surgery (EAS) refers to high-risk intra-abdominal surgical procedures...
Background: Higher volume has been associated with lower mortality for several surgical diseases. It...
Background—Studies that are the basis of recommended volume thresholds for CABG surgery are outdated...
PURPOSE Despite a long-known association between annual hospital volume and outcome, little progress...
Context: Despite growing interest in evidence-based hospital refer-ral for selected surgical procedu...
ObjectiveWe evaluated the combined effect of hospital and surgeon volume on operative outcomes of mi...
Regionalization of complex surgical procedures to high-volume centers is a model for improving hospi...
Studies that documented surgical outcome differencesproliferated in the late 1990s. High-volume hosp...
BACKGROUND: Institutional experience has been associated with reduced mortality after coronary arter...
Better morbidity and mortality outcomes associated with increased hospital procedural volume have be...
Objectives The provision of complex surgery is increasingly centralised to high volume specialist ho...
The association between the quantity of care that a physician or hospital provides and the quality o...
Abstract Background We sought to estimate the numbers of patients affected and deaths avoided by ado...
Background: Understanding the impact of hospital and surgeon volume on emergency intra-abdominal sur...
International audienceAbstract Background The “practice makes perfect” concept considers the more fr...
Objectives Emergency abdominal surgery (EAS) refers to high-risk intra-abdominal surgical procedures...
Background: Higher volume has been associated with lower mortality for several surgical diseases. It...
Background—Studies that are the basis of recommended volume thresholds for CABG surgery are outdated...
PURPOSE Despite a long-known association between annual hospital volume and outcome, little progress...
Context: Despite growing interest in evidence-based hospital refer-ral for selected surgical procedu...
ObjectiveWe evaluated the combined effect of hospital and surgeon volume on operative outcomes of mi...
Regionalization of complex surgical procedures to high-volume centers is a model for improving hospi...
Studies that documented surgical outcome differencesproliferated in the late 1990s. High-volume hosp...
BACKGROUND: Institutional experience has been associated with reduced mortality after coronary arter...
Better morbidity and mortality outcomes associated with increased hospital procedural volume have be...
Objectives The provision of complex surgery is increasingly centralised to high volume specialist ho...
The association between the quantity of care that a physician or hospital provides and the quality o...
Abstract Background We sought to estimate the numbers of patients affected and deaths avoided by ado...
Background: Understanding the impact of hospital and surgeon volume on emergency intra-abdominal sur...