@article{1093, author = {Michael Usher and Nishant Sahni and Dana Herrigel and Gyorgy Simon and Genevieve B. Melton and Anne Joseph and Andrew Olson}, title = {Diagnostic discordance, health information exchange, and inter-hospital transfer outcomes: a population study}, abstract = {

BACKGROUND: Studying diagnostic error at the population level requires an understanding of how diagnoses change over time.

OBJECTIVE: To use inter-hospital transfers to examine the frequency and impact of changes in diagnosis on patient risk, and whether health information exchange can improve patient safety by enhancing diagnostic accuracy.

DESIGN: Diagnosis coding before and after hospital transfer was merged with responses from the American Hospital Association Annual Survey for a cohort of patients transferred between hospitals to identify predictors of mortality.

PARTICIPANTS: Patients (180,337) 18 years or older transferred between 473 acute care hospitals from NY, FL, IA, UT, and VT from 2011 to 2013.

MAIN MEASURES: We identified discordant Elixhauser comorbidities before and after transfer to determine the frequency and developed a weighted score of diagnostic discordance to predict mortality. This was included in a multivariate model with inpatient mortality as the dependent variable. We investigated whether health information exchange (HIE) functionality adoption as reported by hospitals improved diagnostic discordance and inpatient mortality.

KEY RESULTS: Discordance in diagnoses occurred in 85.5% of all patients. Seventy-three percent of patients gained a new diagnosis following transfer while 47% of patients lost a diagnosis. Diagnostic discordance was associated with increased adjusted inpatient mortality (OR 1.11 95% CI 1.10-1.11, p < 0.001) and allowed for improved mortality prediction. Bilateral hospital HIE participation was associated with reduced diagnostic discordance index (3.69 vs. 1.87%, p < 0.001) and decreased inpatient mortality (OR 0.88, 95% CI 0.89-0.99, p < 0.001).

CONCLUSIONS: Diagnostic discordance commonly occurred during inter-hospital transfers and was associated with increased inpatient mortality. Health information exchange adoption was associated with decreased discordance and improved patient outcomes.

}, year = {2018}, journal = {J Gen Intern Med}, volume = {33}, pages = {1447-1453}, month = {12/2018}, issn = {1525-1497}, doi = {10.1007/s11606-018-4491-x}, language = {eng}, }