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Opening ambulatory surgery centers and stone surgery rates in health care markets.

Hollingsworth JM, Krein SL, Birkmeyer JD, Ye Z, Kim HM, Zhang Y, Hollenbeck BK. Opening ambulatory surgery centers and stone surgery rates in health care markets. The Journal of urology. 2010 Sep 1; 184(3):967-71.

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Abstract:

PURPOSE: Ambulatory surgery centers deliver surgical care more efficiently than hospitals but may increase overall procedure use and adversely affect competing hospitals. Motivated by these concerns we evaluated how opening of an ambulatory surgery center impacts stone surgery use in a health care market and assessed the effect of its opening on the patient mix at nearby hospitals. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In a 100% sample of outpatient surgery from Florida we measured annual stone surgery use between 1998 and 2006. We used multiple regression to determine if the rate of change in use differed between markets, defined by the hospital service area, without and with a recently opened ambulatory surgery center. RESULTS: Stone surgery use increased an average of 11 procedures per 100,000 individuals per year (95% CI 1-20, p < 0.001) after an ambulatory surgery center opened in a hospital service area. Four years after opening the relative increase in the stone surgery rate was approximately 64% higher (95% CI 27 to 102) in hospital service areas where a center opened vs hospital service areas without a center. These market level increases in surgery were not associated with decreased surgical volume at competing hospitals and the absolute change in patient disease severity treated at nearby hospitals was small. CONCLUSIONS: While opening of an ambulatory surgery center did not appear to have an overly detrimental effect on competing hospitals, it led to a significant increase in the population based rate of stone surgery in the hospital service area. Possible explanations are the role of physician financial incentives and unmet surgical demand.





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