Health Serv Res 1995 Jun;30(2):295-317
Small area variations in health care delivery in Maryland.
Gittelsohn A, Powe NR.
School of Hygiene and Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore,
MD 21205, USA.
OBJECTIVE: Our purpose is a descriptive analysis of
variations in hospital use among small areas of Maryland.
DATA SOURCE: The data are Maryland patient discharge
records from acute care hospitals for 1985-1987 and small area population
estimates by age, gender, race, and income.
FINDINGS: The common finding was excess geographic variability
among Maryland's 115 areas. The hypothesis of uniform rates was rejected
for most DRGs, including low-variation mastectomy and hernia repair. Clustering
of high-use rates occurred in neighboring areas for orthopedic, vascular,
and elective procedures. Admission rates for most nondiscretionary procedures
and medical DRGs were reduced in affluent areas while discretionary surgery
increased with income level. Elective procedures had extreme variation
and were related to income. Coronary artery disease rates declined with
income while coronary artery procedure rates increased, indicating that
access and patient selection were factors in the use of coronary bypass
and angioplasty.
CONCLUSIONS: The issue is not the ubiquitous variation
among small areas but its extent and identification of geographic patterns.
Hospital use is related to demography, morbidity, medical resources, access,
selection for care, and physician practice patterns. Heterogeneity of
these factors ensures that uniform delivery of health care rarely holds.
There is little evidence that incidence of surgical disease is the main
source of variation in use of discretionary surgery. Rather, variations
reflect differing medical opinion on appropriate use. Without evaluation,
excessive use cannot be distinguished from underservice. Morbidity explains
the variability of nondiscretionary surgery and conditions related to
lifestyle. Access plays an important role for discretionary surgery. Geographic
analysis can identify variation and relate incidence to socioeconomic
and specific local effects. Hospital data do not permit direct assessment
of appropriate care. Understanding the reasons for variation requires
information beyond incidence data. The challenge is to identify and explain
small area variations or to fix them.
PMID: 7782218 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]