Smoking is associated with poorer quality-based outcomes in patients hospitalized with spinal disease

Study design: Retrospective cross-sectional database analysisObjective: The cost of spine surgery is growing exponentially, and cost-effectiveness is a critical consideration. Smoking has been shown to increase hospital costs in general surgery, but this impact has not been reported in spinal surger...

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Main Authors: Erica F Bisson, Christian A. Bowers, Samuel F. Hohmann, Meic H. Schmidt, MD, MBA
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fsurg.2015.00020/full
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spelling doaj-87afdaa9fa6a465591fec32753b937a82020-11-24T23:24:05ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Surgery2296-875X2015-05-01210.3389/fsurg.2015.00020135662Smoking is associated with poorer quality-based outcomes in patients hospitalized with spinal diseaseErica F Bisson0Christian A. Bowers1Samuel F. Hohmann2Meic H. Schmidt, MD, MBA3University of UtahUniversity of UtahUniversity HealthSystem ConsortiumUniversity of UtahStudy design: Retrospective cross-sectional database analysisObjective: The cost of spine surgery is growing exponentially, and cost-effectiveness is a critical consideration. Smoking has been shown to increase hospital costs in general surgery, but this impact has not been reported in spinal surgery patients. The objective of this work was to evaluate the effect of smoking on cost and complications in a large sample of patients admitted for treatment of spinal disease.Methods: In 2012, the authors identified all inpatient admissions to all University HealthSystem Consortium (UHC) hospitals from 2005 to 2011 for spinal disease based on the principal diagnosis ICD-9-CM codes from the prospectively collected UHC database. Patient outcomes—including length of stay; complication, readmission, and intensive care unit admission rates, and total cost—were compared for non-obese smokers and nonsmokers using a two-sample t-test.Results: There were 137,537 patients, including 136,511 (122,608 non-smokers and 13,903 smokers) in the 4 largest diagnostic groups. Smoking was associated with increased complications and worse outcomes in 3 of these 4 groups. All outcomes in the two largest groups—fracture and dorsopathy—were worse in the smoking patients.Conclusions: Smoking patients admitted for spinal disease in the sample had worse outcomes, increased complications, and higher costs than their non-smoking counterparts. In the current health-care climate focused on cost-effectiveness, smoking represents a potentially modifiable area for cost reduction.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fsurg.2015.00020/fullQuality ImprovementSmokingSpineSurgeryvaluemodifiable risk factors
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Erica F Bisson
Christian A. Bowers
Samuel F. Hohmann
Meic H. Schmidt, MD, MBA
spellingShingle Erica F Bisson
Christian A. Bowers
Samuel F. Hohmann
Meic H. Schmidt, MD, MBA
Smoking is associated with poorer quality-based outcomes in patients hospitalized with spinal disease
Frontiers in Surgery
Quality Improvement
Smoking
Spine
Surgery
value
modifiable risk factors
author_facet Erica F Bisson
Christian A. Bowers
Samuel F. Hohmann
Meic H. Schmidt, MD, MBA
author_sort Erica F Bisson
title Smoking is associated with poorer quality-based outcomes in patients hospitalized with spinal disease
title_short Smoking is associated with poorer quality-based outcomes in patients hospitalized with spinal disease
title_full Smoking is associated with poorer quality-based outcomes in patients hospitalized with spinal disease
title_fullStr Smoking is associated with poorer quality-based outcomes in patients hospitalized with spinal disease
title_full_unstemmed Smoking is associated with poorer quality-based outcomes in patients hospitalized with spinal disease
title_sort smoking is associated with poorer quality-based outcomes in patients hospitalized with spinal disease
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Surgery
issn 2296-875X
publishDate 2015-05-01
description Study design: Retrospective cross-sectional database analysisObjective: The cost of spine surgery is growing exponentially, and cost-effectiveness is a critical consideration. Smoking has been shown to increase hospital costs in general surgery, but this impact has not been reported in spinal surgery patients. The objective of this work was to evaluate the effect of smoking on cost and complications in a large sample of patients admitted for treatment of spinal disease.Methods: In 2012, the authors identified all inpatient admissions to all University HealthSystem Consortium (UHC) hospitals from 2005 to 2011 for spinal disease based on the principal diagnosis ICD-9-CM codes from the prospectively collected UHC database. Patient outcomes—including length of stay; complication, readmission, and intensive care unit admission rates, and total cost—were compared for non-obese smokers and nonsmokers using a two-sample t-test.Results: There were 137,537 patients, including 136,511 (122,608 non-smokers and 13,903 smokers) in the 4 largest diagnostic groups. Smoking was associated with increased complications and worse outcomes in 3 of these 4 groups. All outcomes in the two largest groups—fracture and dorsopathy—were worse in the smoking patients.Conclusions: Smoking patients admitted for spinal disease in the sample had worse outcomes, increased complications, and higher costs than their non-smoking counterparts. In the current health-care climate focused on cost-effectiveness, smoking represents a potentially modifiable area for cost reduction.
topic Quality Improvement
Smoking
Spine
Surgery
value
modifiable risk factors
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fsurg.2015.00020/full
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AT christianabowers smokingisassociatedwithpoorerqualitybasedoutcomesinpatientshospitalizedwithspinaldisease
AT samuelfhohmann smokingisassociatedwithpoorerqualitybasedoutcomesinpatientshospitalizedwithspinaldisease
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